China's economy continued its remarkable resilience last year, defying predictions that it would be severely impacted by the ongoing trade war with the US and a crippling property crisis. The country reported a 5% growth rate, meeting Beijing's official target, despite a slowdown in the final quarter of the year to 4.5%. This was the weakest quarterly figure since early 2023.
Despite widespread fears that punitive US tariffs would deal a significant blow to China's economy, the country instead found alternative markets for its products and managed to record its largest-ever trade surplus ($1.2 trillion). The US tariffs proved less punitive than originally threatened, leaving many experts surprised by China's ability to adapt and thrive.
However, not everyone is convinced that China's economic woes are behind it. According to Luke Yeaman, chief economist at the Commonwealth Bank of Australia, navigating a fraught geopolitical landscape remains a major wildcard for the country's economy. Yeaman warned that China's structural challenges, such as its four-year housing market meltdown and looming debt crisis, are not going away.
The impact of the property crisis on consumer confidence is particularly concerning. Home prices have plummeted by over 20% since their peaks in 2021, leaving Chinese homeowners feeling depressed and unwilling to spend. This has cast a pall over economic prospects, with experts warning that even without a banking collapse, property busts can suppress growth for years.
China's leaders have vowed to significantly boost household consumption as a share of the economy over the next five years, but analysts are skeptical about the government's ability to deliver on this promise. Citi analysts describe China's economy as "K-shaped", with contrasting fortunes between exports and manufacturing on one hand, and retail sales on the other.
Further compounding the uncertainty is the question of whether official statistics are reliable. Capital Economics estimates that China's latest growth numbers could be inflated by up to 1.5 percentage points, bringing growth down to around 3.5%.
Despite widespread fears that punitive US tariffs would deal a significant blow to China's economy, the country instead found alternative markets for its products and managed to record its largest-ever trade surplus ($1.2 trillion). The US tariffs proved less punitive than originally threatened, leaving many experts surprised by China's ability to adapt and thrive.
However, not everyone is convinced that China's economic woes are behind it. According to Luke Yeaman, chief economist at the Commonwealth Bank of Australia, navigating a fraught geopolitical landscape remains a major wildcard for the country's economy. Yeaman warned that China's structural challenges, such as its four-year housing market meltdown and looming debt crisis, are not going away.
The impact of the property crisis on consumer confidence is particularly concerning. Home prices have plummeted by over 20% since their peaks in 2021, leaving Chinese homeowners feeling depressed and unwilling to spend. This has cast a pall over economic prospects, with experts warning that even without a banking collapse, property busts can suppress growth for years.
China's leaders have vowed to significantly boost household consumption as a share of the economy over the next five years, but analysts are skeptical about the government's ability to deliver on this promise. Citi analysts describe China's economy as "K-shaped", with contrasting fortunes between exports and manufacturing on one hand, and retail sales on the other.
Further compounding the uncertainty is the question of whether official statistics are reliable. Capital Economics estimates that China's latest growth numbers could be inflated by up to 1.5 percentage points, bringing growth down to around 3.5%.