China's economy softens in August as Beijing continues to grapple with lagging demand
UNB
Publish: 15 Sep 2024, 12:27 PM
BEIJING,
Sep 15 (AP/UNB) - China's economy softened in August, extending a slowdown in
industrial activity and real estate prices as Beijing faces pressure to ramp up
spending to stimulate demand.
Data published by the
National Bureau of Statistics Saturday showed weakening activity across
industrial production, retail sales and real estate this month compared to
July.
"We should be aware
that the adverse impacts arising from the changes in the external environment
are increasing," said Liu Aihua, the bureau's chief economist in a news
conference.
Liu said that demand
remained insufficient at home, and the sustained economic recovery still
confronts multiple difficulties and challenges.
China has been grappling
with a lagging economy post-COVID, with weak consumer demand, persistent
deflationary pressures and a contraction in factory activity.
Chinese leaders have
ramped up investment in manufacturing to rev up an economy that stalled during
the pandemic and is still growing slower than hoped.
Beijing also has to deal
with increasing pressure to implement large-scale stimulus measures to boost
economic growth.
While industrial
production rose by 4.5% in August compared to a year ago, it declined from
July's 5.1% growth, according to the bureau's data released.
Retail sales grew 2.1%
from the same time last year, slower than the 2.7% increase last month.
Fixed asset investment
rose by 3.4% from January to August, down from 3.6% in the first seven months.
Meanwhile, investment in
real estate declined by 10.2% from January to August, compared to last year.
The figures released
Saturday come after trade data for August saw imports grow just 0.5% compared
to a year ago.
The consumer price index
rose 0.6% in August, missing forecasts according to data released Monday.
Officials attributed the higher CPI to an increase in food prices due to bad
weather.
But the core CPI, which
excludes food and energy prices, rose by just 0.3% in August, the slowest in
over three years.
End/UNB/AP/SU