Chinese manufacturing contracts sharply in December
Chinese manufacturing – After China lifted the harshest COVID regulations in the world in early December, the data provided the first official view of the industrial industry.
After Beijing abruptly reversed counter-epidemic measures this month, a wave of COVID infections swept the nation, causing China’s manufacturing activity to decline at the fastest rate since the pandemic first appeared nearly three years ago.
The official purchasing managers’ index (PMI) decreased from 48.0 in November to 47.0 in December, according to data released on Saturday by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS). According to a Reuters poll of economists, the PMI was projected to be 48.0. On a monthly basis, the 50-point threshold divides contraction from growth.
The decrease was the largest since the pandemic’s early stages in February 2020.
After China lifted the harshest COVID regulations in the world in early December, the data provided the first official view of the industrial industry. According to Airfinity, a UK-based provider of health statistics, the total number of illnesses probably reached 18.6 million in December.
Rising infection rates, according to analysts, could result in a temporary labour shortage and more supply chain disruptions. According to Reuters, Tesla planned to continue its restricted output it started this month into next year by operating a lower production schedule at its Shanghai facility in January.
China’s exports could be further slowed by weakening external demand as a result of mounting concerns about a global recession, rising interest rates, inflation, and the conflict in Ukraine, which would harm its extensive manufacturing sector.
For orders for the following year, the majority of factories I am aware of are operating far below capacity right now. Many of the manufacturers I’ve spoken to are at 50%, and some are even lower than 20%, according to Cameron Johnson, a partner at supply chain consulting firm Tidalwave Solutions.
Therefore, despite China’s opening, manufacturing would nonetheless slow down as a result of the global economic slowdown. There will be workers at factories, but no orders.
Chinese manufacturing
According to NBS, 56.3% of manufacturers who were surveyed stated that the epidemic had a significant impact on them in December, an increase of 15.5 percentage points from the month before. However, the majority also stated that they expected things to gradually get better.
The official manufacturing and services PMI, or composite PMI, dropped from 47.1 to 42.6.
According to Mark Williams, chief Asia economist at Capital Economics, “the weeks leading up to Chinese New Year are going to remain difficult for the service sector as individuals won’t want to go out and spend more than required out of fear of contracting an infection.”
However, the situation should improve around the time that individuals return from their Chinese New Year vacation because infections will have decreased and a significant portion of them will have recently had COVID and feel somewhat immune.
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