China slowdown fears deepen as output weakens
China's industrial output weakened in August to its lowest level in
more than three years, official data showed Sunday, in the latest sign
of a deepening slowdown in the world's second-largest economy.
Production at China's factories, workshops and mines increased 8.9
percent in August compared with the same month last year, the National
Bureau of Statistics announced. That represented a weakening from the
9.2 percent gain recorded in July.
The August result was also the worst since a similar increase of 8.9
percent in May of 2009 amid the global economic crisis, according to
previous data.
Anxiety over prospects for China's economy, a key engine of world
growth, have been increasing as government efforts to bolster demand
through more accommodative monetary policy have shown little sign of
working.
China's economy expanded 7.6 percent in the second quarter through
the end of June for its weakest performance in three years, marking the
sixth straight quarter of slower growth.
Data in the current third quarter have remained weak as the slack
global economy, beset by uncertainty amid Europe's debt prolonged
crisis, dents demand for China's exports and domestic activity has been
sluggish.
Urban fixed asset investments -- a key measure of government spending
on infrastructure -- rose 20.2 percent in the first eight months of 2012
compared with the same period the year before, the bureau also said
Sunday. That figure, however, also suggests the situation worsened in
August as itcame in less than the 20.4 percent that was recorded for the
first sevenmonths of the year through July.
Retail sales, China's main gauge of consumer spending, were 13.2
percent higher in August year-on-year, the bureau said, marginally
better than the 13.1 percent increase recorded in July.
Earlier Sunday, the bureau also announced that China's inflation rate
accelerated slightly.
AFP |