After being brutally battered by the coronavirus pandemic last year, Chinese factories bounced back with unexpected vigor last month.
The official index of manufacturing activity, based on surveys of purchasing managers at companies in China, shot up in February to its highest level in more than a decade. The index of service sector activity also rose.
After a year of unrelenting lockdowns, quarantines and coronavirus testing that paralyzed much of the country, Beijing lifted restrictions without warning in early December. The abrupt reversal in policy resulted in a rampage of infections and rough estimates suggest that up to 1.5 million people have died in the Covid wave. But it also freed the economy to begin a revival.
“Overnight we’ve seen a decent change in momentum for risk as upbeat China data has revived optimism for the reopening trade that has been flagging of late,” analysts at Deutsche Bank wrote after the statistics were released. The Hang Seng stock index in Hong Kong rose more than 4 percent on Wednesday.
The upbeat news came just days before China’s leaders gather for the annual meeting of the National People’s Congress.
China is the second-largest economy in the world, after the United States, but its manufacturing capacity is gargantuan, producing about as much of the globe’s factory output as the United States, Germany and Japan combined.
China’s economic growth rate of 3 percent in 2022 was one of its worst showings in nearly half a century.
Analysts at Mitsubishi UFJ Morgan Stanley noted that China’s national statistics bureau cautioned that demand remained weak. It may become clear this weekend whether the political leadership decides to offer support that would prop up private firms, the sagging real estate sector and infrastructure investment.