Acceleration of rebound set to provide stronger support for world economy China's economic recovery is expected to increase its pace and offer
stronger support for the world economy in the coming months, as
indicated by rebounding domestic demand in October, officials and
experts said on Monday. The country's consumer purchasing and investment both staged the
biggest expansion of the year, while growth in industrial production
recovered to pre-COVID-19 levels. Retail sales, a key barometer of consumption, grew by 4.3 percent in
October on a yearly basis, up from 3.3 percent in September, the
National Bureau of the Statistics said on Monday. Fixed-asset investment in the first 10 months rose by 1.8 percent, up from 0.8 percent in the January-September period. The recovery in demand has driven up production, with industrial
output rising by 6.9 percent year-on-year last month, the same as in
September and faster than the 4.7 percent for the same period of last
year, the bureau said. Fu Linghui, an NBS spokesman, said the reviving consumer market has
helped the economy to recover in a more balanced and sustainable manner.
"Economic growth may further accelerate in the fourth quarter of the
year compared with the third and second ones." Despite the rising risk of COVID-19 resurgence in some economies,
China has proved able to contain imported cases while coordinating
economic development, Fu said. After posting 4.9 percent growth in the third quarter, China's
economy should expand by 5 to 6 percent in the fourth quarter and
achieve full-year economic growth of about 2 percent, with domestic
demand further recovering while exports remain robust, experts said. With COVID-19 largely under control domestically, recovery in offline
consumption and services is set to pick up, said Tang Jianwei, chief
researcher at the Bank of Communications' Financial Research Center. "The improving employment situation is also brightening household income prospects and boosting consumption demand," Tang added. According to the NBS, the surveyed urban jobless rate dropped to a
pre-COVID-19 level of 5.3 percent last month. Offline services activity
rebounded in October, with catering revenue nationwide resuming
expansion for the first time this year and up 0.8 percent year-on-year. The resilient domestic market will help anchor the global economy
clouded by the pandemic, as China has vowed to make boosting domestic
demand and opening its market wider among its priorities in the coming
years, experts said. The country will step up efforts to nurture a strong domestic market
and promote win-win international cooperation by virtue of its vast
market in the 14th Five-Year Plan (2021-25) period, said the communique
of the Fifth Plenary Session of the 19th Central Committee of the
Communist Party of China. Huang Qifan, vice-chairman of the China Center for International
Economic Exchanges, said the country is expected to continuously
increase imports in the period, with total imported goods likely to
surpass $22 trillion over the next decade. "Such a huge market demand will definitely provide a direct, lasting
drive for global economic recovery," he said at a forum co-hosted by
ICBC International and Caixin on Sunday. Despite the improving economic figures, the NBS said that "multiple
challenges" still need to be conquered before a full recovery, as
difficulties remain for some enterprises and industries like airlines
and entertainment. Wen Bin, chief researcher at China Minsheng Bank, said China should
further strengthen policy supports for small businesses, manufacturers
and hard-hit services enterprises, and remain vigilant against any
COVID-19 resurgence domestically.
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