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China’s eco­nomic rebound has been weaker than expec­ted.

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China’s eco­nomic rebound has been weaker than expec­ted as con­sumers emerge «stunned» from pan­demic-led dis­rup­tions and a real estate melt­down last year, warned AP Møller-Maersk. Vin­cent Clerc, the new chief exec­ut­ive of the con­tainer ship­ping group, said, however, that trad­ing volumes linked with the eco­nomy remained resi­li­ent, with little sign of neg­at­ive impact from US-led efforts to «decouple» from China. «When we star­ted the year, there was this hope that as China reopens after Covid, we would see a strong rebound,» Clerc said in Beijing. China has set a growth tar­get of 5 per cent this year, its low­est in dec­ades, after the world’s second-largest eco­nomy under­shot expect­a­tions in 2022 as a res­ult of Pres­id­ent Xi Jin­ping’s strict zero-Covid strategy.

The IMF is pre­dict­ing growth of 5.2 per cent in China this year. «This is not quite the Roar­ing Twen­ties-type mood that one could have expec­ted after this long inter­rup­tion,» said Clerc, who was among global chief exec­ut­ives in Beijing at the week­end for the coun­try’s annual China Devel­op­ment Forum investor con­fer­ence. Maersk has gained greater expos­ure to China’s domestic con­sumer mar­ket through its $3.6bn acquis­i­tion in 2021 of Hong Kong-based LF Logist­ics, which has extens­ive logist­ics oper­a­tions on the main­land. However, he added that there was no sign of decoup­ling bey­ond the high-tech sec­tor, which accoun­ted for a frac­tion of the volume of China’s exports and imports.

«China has never traded as much with the rest of the world as it did last year, and at the same time, we are talk­ing about decoup­ling, so it’s an inter­est­ing con­trast,» he said. 

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Comments

  1. Of course consumers are stunned. They've been through so much. There was the real estate meltdown that has left many without houses and their confidence in the government has gone down considerably. And of course they are now afraid of what else could happen so they don't spend as much.

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    1. Most Chinese are worried about their day to day lives since there’s not enough food because of many interruptions and problems caused by their zero-Covid policy. What a bad policy that was! It caused all sorts of issues.

      Delete
  2. To me, this is not unexpected. I know some were thinking China will get back on track quickly but I don’t think that’s the case. I see them having a hard time for the next 2 years, at least. Their real estate is in shambles, people are scared and keeping their money to themselves, and the mood is bleak for both regular people and investors.

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