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China’s manufacturing slumps in August


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BEIJING—China’s manufacturing activity slumped in August to a nine-month low, official figures showed Saturday, in the latest sign of serious weakness in the world’s second-largest economy.

The government’s purchasing managers’ index (PMI) fell to 49.2 in August from 50.1 in July, according to a statement released by the China Federation of Logistics and Purchasing and the National Bureau of Statistics.

A PMI reading above 50 indicates expansion, while one below 50 points to contraction.

The reading was the lowest since 49.0 in November last year, and below the median forecast of 50.0 in a survey of 11 economists by Dow Jones Newswires.

“Not only did the August PMI continue to decrease, but the scope of the decline got bigger and fell below 50 percent,” Zhang Liqun, an analyst with the State Council’s Development Research Center, was quoted as saying in the statement.

Zhang added that the latest result “reflects the manufacturing industry is in a state of contraction”.

China’s economy weakened to an expansion of 7.6 percent in the second quarter up until the end of June, the worst performance in three years and marking the sixth straight quarter of slower growth.

In the current third quarter, July figures for trade, industrial output and retail sales came in weak, raising concerns that government efforts to stimulate growth may be insufficient.

China’s economy is also suffering from declining investment from abroad. Foreign direct investment fell 8.7 percent in July, the worst decline since December. For the first seven months of 2012, FDI fell 3.6 percent on year.

Authorities have tried to boost the economy with interest rate cuts and by lowering the amount of reserves that banks must keep on hand in a bid to spur the kind of lending that could stimulate a rebound.

“China’s manufacturing sector continues to struggle, weighed down by a significant domestic slowdown, a wholly unsupportive external climate and a completely insufficient policy response,” IHS Global Insight economists Ren Xianfang and Alistair Thornton said in a report reacting to the PMI data.

They added that the economy is facing various stresses, including the eurozone crisis, capital outflows and lack of demand for borrowing.

Policy cautions amid fears of going overboard on stimulus measures as well as the distraction of a pending once-a-decade makeover in the country’s leadership are factors as well.

“Minds are not solely focused on the economy,” they wrote of the coming leadership change.

The official PMI figures came just over a week after British banking giant HSBC’s closely watched purchasing managers’ index hit a preliminary reading of 47.8 for August, also the lowest since November in that survey.

HSBC is scheduled to release its final PMI figure for August on Monday.

Analysts say the divergence in the official and private PMI surveys is caused by HSBC giving more weight to small firms, which have suffered more than state-owned giants in the current economic downturn.


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Tags: China , economy , Investment , manufacturing

  • Patas

    …and the bubble achieved its full potential….and where to go next but to….burst.

  • Fulpol

    the economy of huge importers of China products are not doing well…

    less consumer spending… less growth in infrastructure…

    not because of “boycotting”..

    • sanyuyulai

      Fulpol
      Philioinos thought that with their boycotting China will give away Sansha City and SCS.
      Can you people manage it only with those weapon-ripped frigades?
      Your mil strength cannot fight even the militants!

      • http://www.facebook.com/people/Jason-Gerona/1385084187 Jason Gerona

        hoy, akala mo ba Pilipinas lang ang nag boboycot sa inyo? Bobo!!!!

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_P27UWAEDCMLMBGO3VQ3LO7BMA4 Renato

    Buy Philippine Products

  • http://www.facebook.com/paul.ong.526 Paul Ong

    Check your Apple IPad and IPhone. These products are made in China. China offers what consumer wants. They want cheap products, you get cheap products. Good products don’t come in cheap. Cheap products don’t come in good. What China offers are choices. Consumer who want good products have to pay commensurate to quality acceptable. So boycott all cheap China products and more likely you still end up buying expensive China-made goods.

    • ghzoc

       Umm… not really.. many manufacturers, due to rising labor and freight cost, are now moving their factories out of China and into places like ASEAN and Bangladesh. So over time, we will start to see less and less products being made in China. As the matter of fact, I myself is starting to notice it. Almost all the clothing and electronics that I bought last year are made in countries like Bangladesh, Egypt, Thailand, Malaysia and the Philippines. Since China is currently under the crucial process of economic transformation from export driven to domestic driven, the question now is… will China make it? With almost all of world economy is shrinking, will China make it? … or will it paint a gloomy, depressing picture? No one knows yet, but we will find out in coming years.

      Source: Its all over the news.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_DKIPUBDMOKBY5S244FE6SCKAVU Jesus Manggaran, JR

    PEOPLE ARE NOW STARTING TO REALIZE HOW STUPID IT IS TO BUY CHEAP AND LOW-QUALITY PRODUCTS ESPECIALLY THE ONES THAT COME FROM CHINA. AKALA NYO  HA WALANG EPEKTO SA INYO ANG PAG-BOYCOTT SA MGA PANGIT NYONG PRODUKTO…PATIKIM PA LANG YAN…SA SUSUNOD BABAGSAK NANG EKONOMIYA NYO AT BABALIK KAYO SA KUNG SAAN KAYO GALING…MGA MAYAYABANG AT MGA SIRA-ULO!!! BOYCOTT CHINESE PRODUCTS…!!!! TO THE MAX…………………..!!!!!!!!!!

    • ghzoc

       AMEN!!

  • jose_rizal11

    i dont buy china products!!!

  • dprotector

    Continue the boycott of made in China products.

  • http://profile.yahoo.com/IKE6RHTJVWGBWEVJ2EH7Q4I5JI Anonymous

    What China is experiencing right now in its economy is just a transition from an export oriented economy to  domestic driven economy. the Philippines can only look and wonder how the Chinese government is still expanding while the whole world economy is shrinking. Too bad, the Philippines has neither an export oriented economy nor a domestically driven one. What a sad state of affairs…

    • kalaban_mo

      We have been through tough times, don’t be too worry. Just let our resiliency through difficulties shine. 

    • ghzoc

      Yes it is true that the Chinese economy is transitioning from export driven to domestically driven economy. However, will this transition come into completion with “the whole world economy shrinking” and with Chinese corporate profits on steep slide.. OR will these events lead to eventual collapse of the economy? No one knows yet. I would love to see both countries prosper though.. just for the sake of humanity.. 

  • http://profile.yahoo.com/IKE6RHTJVWGBWEVJ2EH7Q4I5JI Anonymous

    Trade with the Philippines is actually just a small part of the big Chinese economic engine. None of this boycott actually works. Even as we speak, the German chancellor Angela Merkel with German entrepreneurs are in Beijing talking about about trade and has just finished signing trade deals with China. Why would a high tech power house like Germany want to do anything with China? The era of substandard Chinese products are numbered. Sad to say, the Philippines is being left behind.

    • kalaban_mo

      You know a lot of things, but can’t hide negativism. Philippines has its good times and bad times. Read history and current events.  

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_ED6A2XHBBMQQYM4MFSZ7BMIB4M batang-gas

    Manufacturing jobs are now in vietnam.



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