2023 saw China’s weakest growth in decades, at 5.2%, as the country’s recovery falters.

Wednesday’s reading is an improvement on the three percent growth recorded in 2022, a year that saw business activity hammered by tight health curbs designed to contain Covid-19.But excluding the pandemic years, 2023 marked China’s weakest performance since 1990.

China’s economy last year suffered one of its worst annual performances in more than three decades, official figures showed Wednesday, as the country battled a crippling property crisis, sluggish consumption and global turmoil.

Gross domestic product expanded 5.2 percent to hit 126 trillion yuan (US$17.6 trillion), China’s national bureau of statistics reported.

Official GDP figures remain a key source of insight into the health of the world’s second-largest economy, despite being eminently political.

Wednesday’s reading is an improvement on the three percent growth recorded in 2022, a year that saw business activity hammered by tight health curbs designed to contain Covid-19.

But excluding the pandemic years, 2023 marked China’s weakest performance since 1990.

After lifting its draconian pandemic measures at the end of 2022, Beijing set itself a growth target of “around five percent” for last year.

The economy enjoyed an initial post-pandemic rebound, but ran out of steam within months as a lack of confidence among households and businesses battered consumption.

An intractable real estate crisis, record youth unemployment and a global slowdown are also gumming the gears of the Chinese growth engine.

The country’s exports — historically a key growth lever — fell last year for the first time since 2016, according to figures published by the customs agency on Friday.

Geopolitical tensions with the United States and efforts by some Western nations to reduce dependence on China or diversify their supply chains have also hit growth.

Officials are due to release their growth target for 2024 in March.

‘Opportunity’
Weighed down by a lack of business confidence and sluggish consumption, China has sought to lure back international investors.

Speaking at the annual meeting of global elites in Davos on Tuesday, Premier Li Qiang painted a bullish picture of the Chinese economy.

“No matter how the world situation changes, China will adhere to its basic national policy of opening up to the outside world,” Li said.

He added that “the door to opening up will only get wider and wider”.

“Choosing the Chinese market is not a risk but an opportunity,” he said.

But risks abound — most prominently in the country’s teetering real estate market.

The sector has long accounted for around a quarter of China’s economy, and experienced dazzling growth for two decades.

But financial woes at major firms such as Evergrande and Country Garden are now fuelling buyer mistrust against a backdrop of unfinished housing developments and falling prices.

Property has long been seen by many Chinese as a safe place to park savings, but price drops have hit their wallets hard.

Also weighing down the economy is a lack of jobs for the country’s youth.

A record of more than one in five people aged 16 to 24 in China were unemployed in May, according to officials.

Beijing has since suspended the monthly publication of youth unemployment figures.


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