ADVERTISEMENT

Coronavirus | China’s economy in worst downturn since 1960s

Updated - April 18, 2020 01:09 pm IST

Published - April 17, 2020 10:16 pm IST - BEIJING

In the March quarter, economy shank by 6.8%, while retail sales fell by 19%; forecasters do not see recovery this year

No masking the slowdown: A mural at Wuhan’s Leishenshan Hospital in Hubei, China. The COVID-19 toll for the city, where the outbreak began, was revised on Friday.

China faces a drawn-out struggle to revive an economy that suffered its biggest contraction since possibly the mid-1960s after millions of people were told to stay home to fight the virus.

The world’s second-largest economy shrank by 6.8% from a year earlier in the quarter ending in March after factories, offices and shopping malls were closed to contain the outbreak, official data showed on Friday. Consumer spending, which supplied 80% of last year’s growth, and factory activity were weaker than expected.

Also read:

ADVERTISEMENT

No plans to limit export of anti-virus supplies, says China

ADVERTISEMENT

China, where the

COVID-19 pandemic began in December, is the first major economy to start to recover after the ruling Communist Party declared the virus under control. Factories were allowed to reopen last month, but cinemas and other businesses that employ millions of people still are closed. There are signs that after an “initial bounce” “the recovery in activity has since slowed to a crawl,” said Julian Evans-Pritchard of Capital Economics in a report. “China is in for a drawn-out recovery.”

The last contraction this big was 5.8% in 1967 during the upheavals of the ultra-radical 1965-75 Cultural Revolution, according to Iris Pang of ING. Forecasters earlier said China might rebound as early as this month. But they say a sharp, “V-shaped” recovery looks increasingly unlikely as negative export, retail sales and other data pile up. Instead, they expect a gradual crawl back to growth in low single digits in the coming quarters. For the full year, forecasters, including UBS, Nomura and Oxford Economics, expect little to no growth.

Also read:

ADVERTISEMENT

China sat on coronavirus pandemic news for six days

ADVERTISEMENT

In total, China has reported 4,632 deaths after the total for Wuhan, the city at the centre of the outbreak, was revised upward on Friday. The mainland has announced 82,367 cases.

Possible job losses

Retail sales fell 19% from a year earlier in the first quarter. That improved in March, the final month of the quarter, to a decline of 15.8%. But consumers, jittery about possible job losses, are reluctant to spend despite government efforts to lure them back to shopping malls and auto showrooms.

That is a blow to automakers and other companies that hope China will power the world economy out of its most painful slump since the 1930s.

That is a political challenge for the ruling party, which bases its claim to power on China’s economic success. The party appealed to companies to keep paying employees and avoid layoffs during the shutdown. But an unknown number has failed, adding to public anxiety.

The economy already was squeezed by a tariff war with President Donald Trump over Beijing’s technology ambitions and trade surplus. Last year’s growth sank to a multi-decade low of 6.1%.

Exports fell 6.6% in March from a year earlier, an improvement over the double-digit plunge in January and February. But forecasters say demand is bound to slump in America and Europe as anti-virus controls keep shoppers at home.

This is a Premium article available exclusively to our subscribers. To read 250+ such premium articles every month
You have exhausted your free article limit.
Please support quality journalism.
You have exhausted your free article limit.
Please support quality journalism.
The Hindu operates by its editorial values to provide you quality journalism.
This is your last free article.

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT