China Industrial-Output Growth Is Slowest in 7 Years 
By Nipa Piboontanasawat

China's industrial output grew at a slower pace than any economist forecast in 
October, stoking concern that the biggest contributor to global growth is 
running out of steam. 
Production rose 8.2 percent from a year earlier, the smallest gain in seven 
years, the statistics bureau said today. None of 18 economists surveyed by 
Bloomberg News predicted such a small increase. Output grew 11.4 percent in 
September. 

The slowdown may prompt the central bank to cut interest rates for the fourth 
time in two months to augment a $586 billion package of government spending on 
housing and infrastructure, announced on Nov. 9. China cut taxes on 28 percent 
of exports yesterday to sustain growth in the economy that accounted for a 
quarter of the global expansion in 2007. 

``China's economy is losing momentum faster than expected: the central bank 
needs to act,'' said Tao Dong, chief Asia economist at Credit Suisse Group AG 
in Hong Kong. ``We hope this is the worst quarter and things start looking 
better next year because of the infrastructure plan.'' 

The one-year lending rate is 6.66 percent after three cuts totaling 81 basis 
points since September. China's third-quarter economic expansion of 9 percent 
was the weakest in five years. 

The yuan traded at 6.8301 against the dollar as of 2:11 p.m. in Shanghai, 
unchanged from before the announcement. The CSI 300 Index of stocks rose 3.3 
percent after the government detailed some spending, including power-plant 
construction. 

Steel, Iron, Automobiles 

Output of crude steel fell 17 percent from a year earlier. Electricity 
production declined 4 percent. Pig iron, steel products, and automobiles 
slipped. Cement and raw-coal output grew at a slower pace than in September. 

The economic slowdown, driven by falling export orders, weakness in real 
estate, and blows to confidence from the global crisis, is hurting companies 
from carmakers to metal producers. 

Aluminum Corp. of China Ltd., or Chalco, the nation's biggest producer of the 
metal, is idling alumina capacity, while PSA Peugeot Citroen, Europe's 
second-largest carmaker, cut 1,000 temporary workers in China after sales 
dropped. 

``A sharp deceleration in industrial activity is being amplified by stock build 
up,'' said Louis Kuijs, an economist with the World Bank in Beijing. ``Many, 
many steel factories and other factories may just as well close down because 
they have enough inventories to provide customers without producing anything.'' 

Deepening Slowdown 

Production growth was the weakest since November 2001, after eliminating 
distortions in January and February each year caused by China's Lunar New Year 
holiday. 

The global credit squeeze brought orders for China's exports to a sudden halt 
last month, Frank Gong, head of China research at JPMorgan Chase & Co., said in 
Beijing today. 

``Importers couldn't get the letters of credit to fulfill their orders so they 
had to cancel,'' Gong said. ``That hit China especially hard because it does a 
lot of business before Christmas.'' 

Inflation eased to the slowest pace in 17 months in October, money supply 
expanded by the least in three years, and import, export and retail sales 
growth cooled, this week's figures showed. 

Construction contracted in September by the most since the 1990s, according to 
Macquarie Securities Ltd. Export orders fell last month to the lowest since 
2005, a survey showed. 

The economy may expand 5.8 percent this quarter, the weakest pace in at least 
15 years, Credit Suisse AG estimates. 

Spending Spree 

The government, which needs to create millions of jobs each year as workers 
migrate to cities from the countryside, is banking that spending on housing, 
rural infrastructure, railways, roads and airports will revive growth. The 
fiscal package runs through 2010. 

``Industrial-production growth should continue to decline as China's 
export-oriented industries scale back their operations due to lower demand from 
the U.S. and Europe,'' said Jing Ulrich, chairwoman of China equities at 
JPMorgan Chase & Co. in Hong Kong. ``With the trade component of China's growth 
slowing, domestic consumption and investment spending will need to pick up the 
slack.'' 

Two surveys, one conducted by the government and the other by CLSA Asia-Pacific 
Markets, showed manufacturing contracted by the most on record in October as 
output and new orders fell. 

China contributed the most to global growth in 2007, the International Monetary 
Fund said in a report in April this year. It used purchasing power parity 
calculations, which account for differences in the exchange rates of national 
currencies. 


http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601068&sid=a_qbnSsVFQDI&refer=economy
When prosperity comes, do not use all of it. 








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