China's Recovery Under Pressure After April, Youth Unemployment rises
China’s leaders are under pressure to support a weakening economic recovery and create jobs after consumer spending and other activities in April were lower than anticipated and a study revealed that 1 in 5 young workers in cities were unemployed.
Retail sales increased after anti-virus restrictions were lifted in December, but they fell short of expectations, according to official data released on Tuesday. Factory output slightly decreased from March.
While the US and European economies are contracting as a result of interest rate hikes to combat inflation, Chinese economic activity has improved. But customers are returning to stores and restaurants less frequently than anticipated because they are concerned about potential job losses.
“The pace of recovery has slowed sharply,” said Larry Hu and Yuxiao Zhang of Macquarie in a report.
Growth in retail sales accelerated to 18.4% over last year’s depressed level in April, but that was below private sector expectations of up to 35%.
Factory output rose 5.6% over a year ago but was off 0.5 percentage points from March. Investment in factories, real estate and other fixed assets rose 4.7% in the first four months of 2023 but slowed from the first quarter’s 5.4% growth rate.
“The recovery of demand is still insufficient,” said Fu Linghui, spokesperson for the National Bureau of Statistics.
“External demand has weakened” and exporters face a “complex and severe” environment, Li said at a news conference.
Surveys found 20.4% of potential urban workers aged 16 to 24 are unemployed and the figure was rising, according to Li.
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That was a record, according to private-sector economists.
“Stabilizing and expanding employment of young people will require continued hard work,” Li said.
Economic growth accelerated to 4.5% over a year earlier in the three months ending in March from the previous quarter’s 2.9%. Growth will have to accelerate in coming quarters to hit the ruling Communist Party’s annual target of “around 5%.”
“The bulk of China’s rebound is now behind us,” Capital Economics said in a report. “The challenging global picture will prevent much pick-up in Chinese exports.”