China's retail sales
climbed mildly in October, rising 14.2 percent year-on-year to
498.3 billion yuan (US$60.2 billion), the National Bureau of
Statistics (NBS) revealed yesterday.
The growth rate compared
to a 14 percent annualized increase of retail sales in September
and 13 percent for the first three quarters.
Urban retail spending
totaled 326.8 billion yuan (US$39.5 billion) in October, a 14.7
percent rise on a year-on-year basis, while retail spending in
rural markets grew by 13 percent during the same period.
The growth of retail sales
was stable and within expectations, said Chen Jijun, a senior
analyst at CITIC Securities.
That is also a good sign
for the healthy development of the economy, he said.
Compared to investment and
exports, which have maintained strong growth in recent years,
consumption also a major engine for the economy is still
comparatively moderate in terms of its growth rate.
It is important for China
to keep consumption strong as the growth in investment is expected
to further slow down, Chen said.
Moreover, exports depend
more on global demand and the global cycle, while the long-term
sustainable growth of the domestic economy should absorb the energy
being created by healthy domestic demand.
CITIC Securities expects
retail sales to rise at a similar rate in the fourth quarter and
possibly gather further momentum next year.
A major fluctuation of the
figure is unlikely, said Chen.
According to NBS
statistics, oil continued to be a major driving force behind
consumption growth in October, as the demand and prices remained
high.
Retail sales of oil and
oil-based products in China recorded a 56 percent increase in
October.
Consumption in the
catering sector was up by 18.5 percent and food recorded a 17.8
percent rise in retail sales.
There was a downturn in
the growth of sales for telecommunication products to the tune of
27.7 percent in October. They had registered growth of 45.2 percent
in the first three quarters.
The seemingly robust
consumption growth is based on rising prices and the actual growth
looks to be tapering off, experts said.
China's consumer price
index (CPI) grew by 4.3 percent in October, down from 5.2 percent
in September.
Therefore, the actual
growth of retail sales currently is still at around 8-10 percent,
which is close to the growth rate of recent years, said Chen.
But it is generally
expected that CPI, the inflationary barometer, will lose more
strength this month and in December, as the government-led economic
cooling-off measures further ease inflationary pressure.
A report recently released
by the State Information Centre, a Beijing-based government
think-tank, has predicted that the CPI growth for 2004 will be
around 4 percent.
And retail sales are
estimated to rise by 12.8 percent for the year, up by 3.7
percentage points from 2003.
But opinions are still
divided on whether the government's macroeconomic controls are
strong enough.
Since last year, the
authorities have taken a series of measures to cool down the
economy to create a soft landing, which included the tightening of
credit supplies and interest rate hikes.
Consequently, the growth
of both fixed investment and bank loans have eased.
(China Daily
November 16, 2004)