China’s economy has slackened in April from the jump seen in the previous month as factory output slowed and retail sales missed analyst expectations, indicating more pressure on the recovery in consumption.
Industrial production grew 9.8 percent in April from a year ago, slower than the 14.1 percent surge in March, National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) data showed on Monday but matching a consensus forecast by analysts from a Reuters poll.
China’s gross domestic product (GDP) expanded by a record 18.3 percent in the first quarter and many economists expect growth will exceed 8 percent this year.
Some warn that continuing global supply chain disruptions and higher comparison bases will sap momentum in coming quarters.
China’s economy showed a steady improvement in April but new problems are also emerging, said Fu Linghui, an NBS spokesman, at a news briefing in Beijing on Monday. “The foundations for the domestic economic recovery are not yet secure,” he said.
China’s surging growth figures in the first months of the year were boosted by the low comparison with an economy paralysed by COVID-19 in the same period a year before.