GDP targets cut down in most provinces
Reuters reports that many Chinese provinces are cutting their GDP targets for 2020 to align with national targets, which are also expected to soften this year:
About two-thirds of Chinaโs provinces, regions and municipalities have cut their 2020 growth targets from last year, despite easing trade tensions with the United States…
Of Chinaโs provincial-level regions, 22 including Beijing, Guangdong, Zhejiang, Henan, Hainan, and Fujian, set lower growth targets this year compared to last, a similar number to last year.
Beijing, Shanghai, and the southern export hub of Guangdong all dropped their targets from 6-6.5 percent growth to โaround 6 percentโ in 2020, in line with the expected change to the national target.
The coronavirusย may have a noticeable impact on the economy if it is not contained in the short term, according to analyses cited by Bloomberg:
UBS noted that โhistory does not repeat itself, but it rhymes,โ while Nomura said that based on the outbreak 17 years ago, it expects โincreased downward pressure on Chinaโs growth, particularly in the services sector.โ…
โIf the pneumonia couldnโt be contained in the short term, we expect Chinaโs retail sales, tourism, hotel & catering, travel activities likely to be hit, especially in Q1 and early Q2,โ UBS said.
A long-term forecast by Capital Economics has predicted that China will continue to close the gap in shares ofย world GDP with the U.S., but wonโt surpass it by 2050. Simon Rabinovitch, a correspondent for The Economist, writesย that this is โfar outside mainstream consensus, and definitely worth marking.โ Chinaโs worsening demographic crisisย is one of the major factors cited.
โLucas Niewenhuis






