Dragon leaps the fastest in 12 years
Gross domestic product of China expanded 11.9% from a year earlier, exceeding estimates.
Gross domestic product expanded 11.9% from a year earlier, the statistics bureau said in Beijing on Thursday, exceeding estimates. Inflation climbed to 4.4% in June, the fastest since September 2004, breaching the central bank’s 3% target for a fourth month.
Growth was powered by investment in factories and real estate that the government has been unable to cool with two rate increases this year and restrictions on bank lending. Allowing the yuan to strengthen may also help quell tensions with the US and Europe, which say China’s record exports reflect the unfair advantage of an artificially low currency.
“Accelerating inflation and a rebound in fixed-asset investment heighten the risk of overheating,” said Wang Qing, chief China economist at Morgan Stanley in Hong Kong. “Demand in key sectors is not outstripping supply yet, but the government is concerned.”
Wang expects an interest-rate increase “any time from now”. The yuan rose to as much as 7.5615 against the dollar, the highest since China abandoned a decade-old peg to the dollar in July 2005. It traded at 7.5637 at 2:10 pm in Shanghai, from 7.5639 before the report was released. The currency has climbed 9.4% since the link ended.
That isn’t enough for US lawmakers. Presidential candidates Senators Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama plan to co-sponsor legislation pushing for faster gains in the yuan. “What they really need to do is accelerate the pace of currency appreciation,” said Frank Gong, an economist at JPMorgan Chase & Co in Hong Kong. “One major reason for the strong growth is the expanding trade surplus.”
Liang Hong, senior economist at Goldman Sachs Group in Hong Kong, increased her 2007 GDP forecast to 12.3% from 10.8%. Calyon, the investment banking unit of Credit Agricole, raised its forecast to 11.2% from 10%. “Our forecasts assume decisive policy tightening taking place in the second half of 2007,” said Goldman’s Liang, predicting two more 27-basis-point interest-rate increases this year, a reduction in the amount of money available for lending and other measures to restrict investment.
“China will continue to strengthen and improve macro-economic controls in the second half of this year” to keep money supply and lending under control, said Li Xiaochao, spokesman for the statistics bureau. The central bank is expected to increase the benchmark one- year interest rate from 6.57% and the deposit rate from 3.06% at least once this year, according to 21 of 25 economists surveyed.
China’s economy accounts for about a 10th of global growth and its appetite for commodities drove the prices of nickel and iron ore to records this year. Premier Wen advocates “moderate” measures to cool growth. He wants to avoid a sudden slowdown that could throw hundreds of thousands out of work and ignite social tension in the world’s most populous nation.
A shortage of pigs following an outbreak of disease and surging international grain prices were among the main drivers of China’s inflation, complicating efforts of the central bank to contain unpopular price rises.
Food inflation accounted for 2.5 percentage points of the overall 3.2% inflation for the first half, the statistics bureau said. Rising food prices, high stock and property prices and excessive liquidity from the nation’s record trade surplus “may in combination push inflation further”, said Li. “Tightening monetary policy isn’t going to immediately rectify rising food prices,” said Jing Ulrich, chairwoman of China equities at JPMorgan Chase & Co in Hong Kong. “The government will have to use different methods.”
To make savings more attractive, lawmakers last month passed legislation that will allow the cabinet to scrap or reduce a 20% tax on interest income. In May, the government raised stamp duty on share trades to cool the stock market. The CSI 300 has fallen about 11% since its June 19 record. The index fell 1.26 points to 3806.31 at 2:12 pm in Shanghai. Fixed-asset investment in urban areas jumped 26.7% in H1 from a year earlier, up from 25.3% in Q1.
China is also trying to encourage consumer spending by raising minimum wages and improving social security. Retail sales rose 16% in June from a year earlier after gaining 15.9% in May.
“Investment growth is likely to moderate, given continued monetary and administrative tightening,” said JPMorgan’s Gong. “Retail sales have been accelerating this year and we expect this momentum to carry” into H2.
Industrial output climbed 19.4% in June, the most in a year, after increasing 18.1% in May. China exported $112.5 billion more than it imported in the first six months, an increase of 84% from a year earlier.
That inflow of money pushed China’s foreign reserves, the world’s largest, to $1.3 trillion at the end of June and quickened money supply growth. Banks lent 2.5 trillion yuan in the first six months of 2007, 80% of last year’s total.
The export-and investment-driven economy is drawing closer to replacing Germany as the world’s third largest. Gross domestic product expanded 11.1% in 2006 to 21.09 trillion yuan ($2.79 trillion). Germany’s economy was valued at $2.89 trillion.
The Economic Times Business News App for the Latest News in Business, Sensex, Stock Market Updates & More.
The Economic Times News App for Quarterly Results, Latest News in ITR, Business, Share Market, Live Sensex News & More.