China – stagneert het herstel?
Zal China zich economisch herstellen, zoals algemeen wordt gehoopt? Daniel Lacalle is er niet zo zeker van.
One of the key pillars of the consensus bullish view about 2021 is the Chinese recovery, supported by very optimistic estimates of growth in services and exports.
The details in the official February Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) show a different picture. It seems that the data of the Chinese economy, especially in services and exports, is inconsistent with a 6% GDP growth as most analysts expect for 2021.
February figures were surprisingly weak, especially because the majority of economists already expected a slowdown due to the holidays. The consensus message is that we should not worry about this, because the PMIs reflect an expected seasonal weakness and effects of the virus case increase before the Lunar New Year. However, those two factors were already embedded in consensus estimates.
The official manufacturing PMI fell in February to 50.6 from 51.3 in January. A figure above 50 means expansion, and below, contraction. To see the manufacturing sector, key driver of the recovery in 2020, close to contraction even in the official figure, is a concern. This is a very large drop, significantly worse than the consensus average forecast of 51.0, at the lower end of economists’ forecasts.
The non-manufacturing PMI, which includes construction and services, dropped to 51.4, below the consensus forecast of 52.0 and the lowest since March 2020 after the economy re-opened from the lockdown.
What caused this slump? A drop in construction and a very poor reading of export new orders. The weak manufacturing and construction figures show that the “virtual” celebration of this year’s Lunar New Year holiday had a more negative effect than estimated.
Something is wrong when an export-led economy shows a massive slump in orders in the middle of a global recovery. The new export orders index fell into contraction territory for the first time since September 2020.
Two factors have affected the export orders’ weakness. The relative strength of the Yuan, which has reduced orders for the lower added-value products, and the rise in the input and output price PMIs, which shows that inflationary pressures remained elevated. We could also conclude that the European economy double-dip recession risk has affected orders.
De cijfers van de chinese economie kloppen niet, hebben nooit geklopt en zullen nooit kloppen .Het is een staatsgeleide economie waar alleen de staat de opdrachten geeft en daarna de cijfertjes naar eigen welbevinden aanpast .
China is als een ongeleid projectiel. Wat wil China. Meer, meer, meer… China. En worden we daar met z’n allen gelukkig van? Dat heel de planeet wordt aangestuurd door die gangstercommunistenwaan in Peking?
Diktaturen stagneren nooit.
Al gaat een [ groot ] deel van de bevolking er aan. De diktatuur gaat voort.