homeworld NewsChina's growth may slow to 4% this year, but its supply chains are intact: Experts

China's growth may slow to 4% this year, but its supply chains are intact: Experts

Economists Ben Cavender and Dan Wang see two immediate problems for China, one is the intermitted harsh lockdowns that create uncertainty and two is the deep slump in the property sector.

By Latha Venkatesh  Jul 20, 2022 5:51:08 PM IST (Updated)

4 Min Read
China took around 45-57 percent of global consumption in base metals and continues to be the world's biggest refiner of metals, accounting between 35 percent and 55 percent of total global production in 2021, according to Nicolas Aguzin, CEO of the Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing (HKEX), owner of the LME since 2012. He was speaking at an LME seminar on metals. This explains why a slowdown in China can be both recessionary and inflationary for the global economy.
There is no doubt that China is slowing as its Q2 (April-June) GDP was up only 0.4 percent YoY, versus forecasts of 1 percent. The GDP is down from Q1 growth of 4.8 percent; what's worse in Q2 is that it showed a sharp QoQ contraction of 2.6 percent against an estimate of 1.5 percent contraction. In 1H CY2022, China's GDP grew 2.5 percent and analysts are deeply sceptical of the country achieving the full-year GDP growth target of 5.5 percent.
CNBC-TV18 spoke to two experts to understand how much is China slowing: Ben Cavender, managing director of China Market Research Group, and Dan Wang, chief economist at Hang Seng Bank, China.