In new year, all rebound signs flash go go go
A worker tests auto spare parts at a manufacturing company in Zhejiang province. HU JIANHUAN /FOR CHINA DAILY |
Several business confidence surveys have shown that China's attractiveness is regaining traction among entrepreneurs despite a slower GDP growth.
Based on a study of over 5,000 industrial businessmen nationwide, the People's Bank of China set the entrepreneur index at 54.2 percent by December, a third quarterly growth in a row.
China's factory output and retail sales grew faster than expected by the end of 2016 as a strong housing market and a government infrastructure spending spree underpinned growth in the world's second-largest economy.
Executives at China's largest corporations ended 2016 on an upbeat note with overall confidence rising to the highest level since August 2014 in December, according to the MNI China Business Sentiment Index.
The pickup in sentiment suggests companies remain cautiously optimistic going into 2017. The survey polls Chinese business executives at a mix of manufacturing and service sector companies listed on both the Shanghai and Shenzhen Stock Exchanges.
Since the start of the fourth quarter of 2016, output and demand have been trending upward, driving the increase in sentiment among executives. Production rose further in December, rising 0.9 points to 58.9-the highest level since September 2015.
"Broadly consistent with more upbeat official data on the real economy, our survey points to sustained growth momentum going into 2017. Business conditions improved soundly during December, with output continuing to gain pace and new orders holding up fairly well," said Andy Wu, senior economist of MNI Indicators.
Similarly, the business confidence index has been rising for four months in a monthly survey by the Cheung Kong Graduate School of Business, suggesting optimism is sprouting among business operators across China for prospects over the next six months.
The CKGSB index comprises four sub-indices for corporate sales, corporate profits, corporate financing environment and inventory levels. The latest survey showed expansion among the first three gauges. Inventory remains a critical issue notably for small and medium-sized enterprises.
According to a joint survey among 50 economic experts by the Centre for European Economic Research and Fudan University, a growth rate of 6.5 percent is predicted for China's economy in 2017. This would constitute a decline of 0.2 percentage points compared to the recently published official growth figures last year.
Surveyed experts do not seem to see any greater dangers to the Chinese economy. For example, no dangers are foreseen from a possible decline in exports. The majority of experts continue to predict an increase in exports over the next six months, and even a greater share of world trade for China.
Buoyed by healthy domestic consumption, imports are also expected to continue to increase, said Sun Lijian, professor of economics at Fudan University.