TRADE WARS
China factory activity expands in May
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) May 31, 2017


Activity in China's key factory sector expanded in May, official data showed Wednesday, in a sign of stabilisation in the world's second-largest economy.

Recent indicators have pointed to slowing growth in the Asian economic giant as it grapples with weaker global demand, excess industrial capacity and a burgeoning debt problem.

But the latest purchasing managers' index, a gauge of factory conditions, came in at 51.2, the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) said, unchanged from the previous month.

Analysts surveyed by Bloomberg News had expected a reading of 51.

A figure above 50 indicates growth in the sector, which has long been a major driver of the Chinese economy, while anything below points to contraction.

An expansion in market supply and demand as well as an acceleration in consumer goods manufacturing contributed to the result, NBS analyst Zhao Qinghe said.

"While Chinese growth may have slowed from earlier this year, it looks to have stabilised at a level that is still solid and consistent with the official 6.5 percent (gross domestic product) target," said Shane Oliver, head of investment strategy at AMP Capital Investors in Sydney.

Tommy Xie, an economist at OCBC Bank in Singapore, said PMI would probably stay above 50 for the rest of the year as the global economy recovers.

But he warned tighter credit conditions and higher borrowing costs for factories would "inevitably slow growth".

China is transitioning from an investment-driven economic model to one more reliant on consumer spending, which has put the brakes on growth in recent years.

But Beijing hopes that its Belt and Road initiative, an ambitious infrastructure project aimed at reviving ancient trading routes from Asia to Europe and Africa, could provide fresh impetus for economic activity.

TRADE WARS
Layoffs rile India's flagship IT sector
Mumbai (AFP) May 31, 2017
Experienced Indian techie Raghu Narayanaswamy lost his job recently and fears he may not get another, as analysts warn of massive layoffs across the country's multi-billion-dollar information technology sector. IT outsourcing has long been one of India's flagship industries but experts say automation, a failure to keep up with new technologies and US President Donald Trump's clampdown on vis ... read more

Related Links
Global Trade News

Comment using your Disqus, Facebook, Google or Twitter login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle

TRADE WARS
Nuclear spent fuel fire could force millions of people to relocate

UN braces for up to 200,000 Iraqis to flee Mosul

Why civilian deaths in Iraq and Syria are increasing

Countries most affected by weather disasters do not spend more on weather services

TRADE WARS
Neutron lifetime measurements take new shape for in situ detection

One-dimensional crystals for low-temperature thermoelectric cooling

New theory predicts wetted area of droplets colliding with flat surface

Breaking glass in infinite dimensions

TRADE WARS
Water efficiency in rural areas is getting worse, even as it improves in urban centers

Water is surprisingly ordered on the nanoscale

Sentinel-2 captures coral bleaching of Great Barrier Reef

NASA adds up record Australia rainfall

TRADE WARS
NASA's Arctic Ecosystem Science Flights Begin

Elevation could help explain why Antarctica is warming slower than Arctic

China says no mining planned in Antarctica

Antarctica 'greening' due to climate change

TRADE WARS
Bordeaux pins hopes for ravaged vineyards on June bloom

Bordeaux pins hopes for ravaged vineyards on June bloom

Helping plants pump iron

Popular artificial sweetener also works as pesticide and insect birth control

TRADE WARS
Study explains severity of 9.2 magnitude Sumatra earthquake

Expect above-average Atlantic hurricane season, US forecasters say

Mexico next in line to examine geothermal energy

Researchers discover hottest lavas that erupted in past 2.5 billion years

TRADE WARS
Africa, so close yet so far from G7 summit

Nigeria seizes illegal arms shipment

Four killed in I.Coast clashes between ex-rebels and police

Angry Ivory Coast ex-rebels block access to cities

TRADE WARS
New hypothesis about the origin of humankind suggests oldest hominin lived in Europe

Portions of human skeletal structure were established millions of years earlier than previously thought,

Study reveals architecture of the 'second brain,' the enteric nervous system

'Moral enhancement' technologies are neither feasible nor wise