OECD Economic Outlook – June 2022: China

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China Economic growth will slide to 4.4% in 2022 and rebound to 4.9% in 2023. Amid mounting headwinds, growth will be supported by investment in the climate transition and the frontloading of infrastructure projects. Real estate investment will remain weak due to the continuing defaults across developers and falling price expectations. Exports will remain relatively strong as companies continue to raise their market shares. Adverse confidence effects related to continuing lockdowns coupled with inadequate social protection will weigh on consumption. China’s large oil and grain reserves will mitigate the impact of rising global energy and food prices. Monetary policy has become more supportive with a series of interest rate and reserve requirement rate cuts, but will refrain from significant easing. Fiscal policy will become more supportive as the composition of spending shifts towards infrastructure, though the use of fiscal reserves will mean the headline deficit will shrink. Fiscal measures should focus more on renewables investment and the energy transition to achieve climate mitigation objectives. Recent measures to create a single domestic market are welcome and the phasing out of administrative monopolies should be accelerated. The zero-COVID policy has been maintained GDP growth slowed to 1.3% quarter-on-quarter in the first quarter of 2022 from 1.5% in the fourth quarter of 2021. This partly reflected the stringent measures that remain in place to eradicate the spread of COVID-19, resulting in strict lockdowns in key economic centres such as Shanghai and Beijing. These have continued in the second quarter of 2022, disrupting economic activity. Nearly 90% of the population is vaccinated by domestically-made vaccines, which are considered less effective than the ones used in OECD countries. Moreover, the share of the elderly is high among the unvaccinated. All the infected continue to be obliged to isolate collectively and millions are being put into lockdown. These policies create demand for new isolation facilities, new jobs at local neighbourhood centres and delivery companies, but

China 1 Growth has slowed

Housing investment is still declining

Real GDP

Residential floor space, year to date

Y-o-y % changes 20

Y-o-y % changes 70 60

16

50 40

12

30 20

8

10 4

0 -10

0

-20 -30

-4

-40 -8

2019

2020

2021

0

0

2019

2020

2021

-50

Source: CEIC. StatLink 2 https://stat.link/r4oej0

OECD ECONOMIC OUTLOOK, VOLUME 2022 ISSUE 1: PRELIMINARY VERSION © OECD 2022


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