China Daily (Hong Kong)

Key reforms and new drivers should help maintain acceptable growth

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BEIJING — Economic growth may slow as China continues moves to contain debt and financial risks.

But a steep decline is unlikely due to a buttressin­g effect from reforms and burgeoning new growth drivers.

Fresh data showed that despite an overall picture of stabilizin­g growth, signs of weakening momentum have emerged in the economy.

This has stoked concerns the rebound has lost steam and the economy may face a hard landing.

The official purchasing managers’ index for the manufactur­ing sector, released last week by the National Bureau of Statistics, was 51.2 in May and flat with the reading in April, which was the lowest since October.

Still, the index has remained above the 50-point mark, which separates expansion from contractio­n, for the 10th straight month.

The official service PMI continued fast growth, rising to 54.5 in May from 54 in April — evidence of a better economic structure.

China has been striving to shift its economy toward a growth model that draws strength from consumptio­n, the service sector and innovation. Last year, the service sector accounted for more than half of the Chinese economy.

Yet a private survey of smaller manufactur­ers showed last week that the sector had fallen below 50 last month for the first time in 11 months. The Caixin manufactur­ing PMI came in at 49.6 in May, down from 50.3 in April.

China’s manufactur­ing sector had “come under greater pressure” in May, said Zhong Zhengsheng, director of macroecono­mic analysis at CEBM Group, a subsidiary of Caixin Insight Group.

Zhong believes the economy is on a downward trajectory.

Wang Tao, a UBS economist,

We should not underestim­ate the senior leadership’s desire to contain financial leverage and risks, efforts on which have only just begun, even if they may lead to slower credit and economic growth.” Wang Tao, a UBS economist

expected other May data to show marginally slower industrial production growth, cooler export demand and consumer inflation picking up.

Slower credit growth due to China’s ongoing supervisor­y tightening could lead to weaker fixed-asset investment and activities later in the year.

“Softening property sales amid policy tightening may also weigh on constructi­on by the end of the year,” said Wang, who expected China’s GDP growth to slow to 6.5 percent in the fourth quarter.

That forecast was in line with the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, a government think tank. CASS expects the economy to grow 6.7 percent and 6.6 percent in the second and third quarter, respective­ly.

GDP expanded 6.9 percent in the first quarter of the year, up from the 6.8 percent in the previous quarter and 6.7 percent for 2016.

The government has targeted annual growth of around

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