BEIJING, Sept 3: China’s manufacturing activity fell to its lowest level in more than three years in August as the global economic slowdown continues to weigh on the world’s largest exporter, the HSBC said on Monday.
The final reading of the British banking giant’s closely-watched purchasing managers’ index (PMI), which gauges nationwide manufacturing activity, slid to 47.6 last month from 49.3 in July, the HSBC said in a statement.
This was the lowest since March 2009 and marked the tenth consecutive monthly fall, the bank said. It chimed with the official PMI figure released on Saturday, which hit a nine-month low of 49.2 from 50.1 in July. A PMI reading above 50 indicates expansion, while one below 50 points to contraction.
The HSBC economist Qu Hongbin said the figures showed China’s manufacturing sector faced “intensifying downward pressure” and urged the government to step up easing measures.
“China’s exporters are facing increasing difficulties amid stronger global headwinds,” he said, adding new export orders contracted last month at the sharpest pace since March 2009 while employers cut jobs at the fastest rate in 41 months.
Ren Xianfang, an analyst with research firm IHS Global Insight, linked the August fall to a slowdown in the US consumption in the second quarter. “The deterioration in exports since July has rung alarm bells” in China, she added.
Exports to the US rose by a marginal 0.6 per cent to $30.1 billion in July from a year ago, compared with 11.4-per cent growth in the first seven months of the year, official data showed.
Authorities have tried to boost the economy with interest rate cuts and by lowering the amount of reserves that banks must keep on hand in a bid to spur the kind of lending that could stimulate a rebound.—AFP
































