Zürcher Nachrichten - China premier issues warning on Covid-hit economy

EUR -
AED 3.748534
AFN 73.827237
ALL 98.361961
AMD 405.386724
ANG 1.840023
AOA 930.750287
ARS 1060.584935
AUD 1.658201
AWG 1.839558
AZN 1.738476
BAM 1.958427
BBD 2.061466
BDT 124.046419
BGN 1.954783
BHD 0.384549
BIF 3020.251917
BMD 1.020559
BND 1.403383
BOB 7.070486
BRL 6.240613
BSD 1.02098
BTN 88.540616
BWP 14.451388
BYN 3.341101
BYR 20002.959622
BZD 2.050701
CAD 1.469646
CDF 2929.004887
CHF 0.937159
CLF 0.037513
CLP 1035.030427
CNY 7.483043
CNH 7.505641
COP 4435.1154
CRC 515.879458
CUC 1.020559
CUP 27.044818
CVE 110.412045
CZK 25.197109
DJF 181.803905
DKK 7.460553
DOP 62.533894
DZD 139.063429
EGP 51.579775
ERN 15.308387
ETB 130.53262
FJD 2.38678
FKP 0.840519
GBP 0.839915
GEL 2.883101
GGP 0.840519
GHS 15.110272
GIP 0.840519
GMD 72.972155
GNF 8828.844624
GTQ 7.879571
GYD 213.596557
HKD 7.945915
HNL 25.964834
HRK 7.531265
HTG 133.288818
HUF 413.289215
IDR 16628.684856
ILS 3.743003
IMP 0.840519
INR 88.469615
IQD 1337.494359
IRR 42952.786229
ISK 144.705036
JEP 0.840519
JMD 160.044713
JOD 0.723882
JPY 160.626862
KES 132.159461
KGS 89.233507
KHR 4126.536089
KMF 487.877881
KPW 918.503361
KRW 1497.843898
KWD 0.313819
KYD 0.850841
KZT 542.053932
LAK 22279.890312
LBP 91426.756541
LKR 300.896306
LRD 191.426815
LSL 19.567351
LTL 3.013446
LVL 0.617326
LYD 5.064795
MAD 10.317642
MDL 19.142681
MGA 4808.332989
MKD 61.532788
MMK 3314.736356
MNT 3467.86015
MOP 8.188886
MRU 40.542391
MUR 48.066725
MVR 15.716315
MWK 1770.331679
MXN 21.264412
MYR 4.602685
MZN 65.21235
NAD 19.567351
NGN 1582.678779
NIO 37.570404
NOK 11.714504
NPR 141.664584
NZD 1.836915
OMR 0.392901
PAB 1.02097
PEN 3.850566
PGK 4.096496
PHP 59.900189
PKR 284.431721
PLN 4.271979
PYG 8037.507334
QAR 3.722066
RON 4.973694
RSD 117.134643
RUB 105.168075
RWF 1428.316204
SAR 3.831295
SBD 8.612927
SCR 14.588846
SDG 613.35609
SEK 11.515285
SGD 1.401549
SHP 0.840519
SLE 23.217616
SLL 21400.615316
SOS 583.468478
SRD 35.822134
STD 21123.514202
SVC 8.932984
SYP 13269.31024
SZL 19.547746
THB 35.481794
TJS 11.159071
TMT 3.571957
TND 3.30223
TOP 2.390252
TRY 36.222109
TTD 6.931129
TWD 33.755017
TZS 2546.294927
UAH 43.274733
UGX 3776.065904
USD 1.020559
UYU 44.609848
UZS 13243.767608
VES 54.91341
VND 25922.202775
VUV 121.162833
WST 2.85841
XAF 656.838203
XAG 0.034207
XAU 0.000382
XCD 2.758112
XDR 0.786936
XOF 656.831758
XPF 119.331742
YER 254.374607
ZAR 19.493723
ZMK 9186.258095
ZMW 28.101701
ZWL 328.619635
  • RIO

    0.6190

    59.459

    +1.04%

  • BTI

    -0.9050

    34.995

    -2.59%

  • BP

    -0.0350

    31.255

    -0.11%

  • SCS

    0.0500

    11.02

    +0.45%

  • CMSC

    -0.1700

    22.75

    -0.75%

  • RBGPF

    -1.5100

    60.49

    -2.5%

  • NGG

    -0.0100

    56.12

    -0.02%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1500

    6.95

    -2.16%

  • GSK

    -0.4860

    32.604

    -1.49%

  • BCC

    2.1000

    117.98

    +1.78%

  • CMSD

    -0.1000

    23.15

    -0.43%

  • BCE

    0.1950

    23.155

    +0.84%

  • AZN

    -1.1300

    65.88

    -1.72%

  • JRI

    -0.0500

    12.03

    -0.42%

  • VOD

    0.0940

    8.144

    +1.15%

  • RELX

    -0.6400

    45.73

    -1.4%

China premier issues warning on Covid-hit economy
China premier issues warning on Covid-hit economy / Photo: STR - AFP/File

China premier issues warning on Covid-hit economy

China's premier has sounded an unusually stark warning about the world's second-largest economy, saying it must return to normal as the country's zero-Covid strategy bites into growth.

Text size:

China is the last major economy welded to a policy of mass testing and rapid lockdowns to eliminate virus clusters, but the strict curbs have battered businesses.

Restrictions on dozens of cities in recent months -- including the manufacturing hubs of Shenzhen and Shanghai as well as the breadbasket of Jilin -- have tangled supply chains and dragged economic indicators to their lowest levels in around two years.

In some ways, the challenges now are "greater than when the pandemic hit hard in 2020", Premier Li Keqiang told a State Council meeting on Wednesday, according to a readout by the official Xinhua news agency.

"We are currently at a critical juncture in determining the economic trend of the whole year," Xinhua quoted Li as saying.

"We must seize the time window and strive to bring the economy back onto a normal track."

Li's remarks are the latest in a growing chorus of calls from officials and business leaders for more balance between stopping the virus and helping the ailing economy.

China's retail sales plunged 11.1 percent on-year in April while factory output sank 2.9 percent -- the worst showing since the early days of the Covid crisis.

And the urban unemployment rate edged back towards its February 2020 peak, challenging policymakers' full-year growth target of around 5.5 percent.

In March and particularly in April, indicators such as employment, industrial production, electricity consumption and freight dropped "significantly", Li said at the State Council meeting.

He stressed the importance of coordinating virus control and economic development, according to Xinhua.

- Wilting growth -

China's current outbreak -- fuelled by the highly transmissible Omicron virus variant -- is the worst since the early days of the pandemic in 2020.

Its biggest city and business hub Shanghai has been almost entirely sealed off since April, crushing businesses, while curbs are creeping in the capital Beijing.

The government has offered tax relief and a bond drive to help industries, and President Xi Jinping earlier called for an "all-out" infrastructure push.

But analysts have cautioned that growth will keep wilting until China eases its rigid virus controls.

S&P Global Ratings this month lowered its full-year growth forecast for China from 4.9 percent to 4.2 percent due to Covid curbs.

And Nomura analysts warned in a recent note that there is "increasing potential for negative GDP growth in the second quarter".

Wednesday's State Council teleconference involved an unusually large cohort of provincial, city and county officials, Chinese outlet The Economic Observer reported.

The economic woes come in a pivotal political year for Xi, who is eyeing another term in power at the Communist Party Congress this autumn.

I.Widmer--NZN