The revised outlook comes as senior Communist Party officials convened in Beijing to deliberate on economic policies to turn around China’s struggling economy.
Global investment banks cut their growth forecasts after China reported its slowest economic growth in five quarters, casting a shadow over one of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP)’s most important political meetings.
Monday’s data led several major investment banks to lower their growth forecasts.
JP Morgan reduced its full-year outlook from 5.2 percent to 4.7 percent, and said China’s second quarter and June data indicates that economic activity remains “fragile, unstable, and uneven.”
A research note from Societe Generale described China’s economy as suffering “severe imbalances,” with “very depressed” domestic demand and a “highly deflationary” policy mix.
Goldman Sachs revised its full-year GDP growth forecast for China down to 4.9 percent from 5 percent, but raised its 2025 forecast to 4.3 percent from 4.2 percent.
The investment bank in a note on Monday said it saw significant divergences in China’s economy, highlighting still-depressed property activity. Its economists said “more policy easing is necessary through the remainder of this year,” especially “on the fiscal and housing fronts.”
Economic Data
Growth missed the consensus forecast of 5.1 percent growth of 30 economists in a Nikkei poll as well as analysts in separate surveys by Reuters and Bloomberg. It was also below the AFP forecast of 5.3 percent.
Quarter-on-quarter, gross domestic product (GDP) expanded by 0.7 percent in April-June, falling short of the expected 1.1 percent increase and down from a revised 1.5 percent rise in the previous quarter.
Domestic demand remains weak. Retail sales of consumer goods, a key indicator of household spending, rose only 2 percent year-on-year in June, down from a 3.7 percent increase in May.
In May, the CCP introduced measures to stimulate the real estate market, including lowering downpayment ratios, reducing housing provident fund loan interest rates, and purchasing unsold residential units for public housing.
Despite these policies, the market remains sluggish. According to the latest official Chinese regime data, investment in real estate development fell by 10.1 percent in the first half of the year. The sales area of new homes dropped by 19 percent, and the sales value of new commercial housing decreased by 25 percent.
In June, the prolonged property crisis worsened as new home prices dropped at the fastest rate in nine years, weakening consumer confidence and restricting local governments from raising more funds through land sales.
David Huang, a U.S.-based economic commentator, said the overall situation is a downward spiral with no signs of improvement. “It will likely take some time to reach the bottom,” Mr. Huang told The Epoch Times.
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