Dubai Telegraph - China's 2025 economic growth likely slowest in decades: analysts

EUR -
AED 4.238556
AFN 72.7108
ALL 96.082026
AMD 435.639205
ANG 2.065997
AOA 1058.341098
ARS 1611.474574
AUD 1.62305
AWG 2.077442
AZN 1.963632
BAM 1.955918
BBD 2.31787
BDT 141.20853
BGN 1.972773
BHD 0.435694
BIF 3416.932404
BMD 1.154135
BND 1.470557
BOB 7.968499
BRL 5.995037
BSD 1.150835
BTN 106.274197
BWP 15.639471
BYN 3.451804
BYR 22621.040548
BZD 2.31447
CAD 1.580039
CDF 2614.114822
CHF 0.90569
CLF 0.026523
CLP 1047.273231
CNY 7.948352
CNH 7.943419
COP 4271.614184
CRC 539.416228
CUC 1.154135
CUP 30.58457
CVE 112.12455
CZK 24.430957
DJF 204.926165
DKK 7.472578
DOP 70.242113
DZD 152.435303
EGP 60.293726
ERN 17.312021
ETB 181.199444
FJD 2.548387
FKP 0.867712
GBP 0.863752
GEL 3.127505
GGP 0.867712
GHS 12.562759
GIP 0.867712
GMD 84.823045
GNF 10085.390801
GTQ 8.833022
GYD 241.259546
HKD 9.044873
HNL 30.665647
HRK 7.534209
HTG 150.955849
HUF 388.755308
IDR 19579.029955
ILS 3.577183
IMP 0.867712
INR 106.631949
IQD 1511.916486
IRR 1516533.02462
ISK 143.597326
JEP 0.867712
JMD 181.035446
JOD 0.818281
JPY 183.34598
KES 149.517795
KGS 100.928472
KHR 4618.158943
KMF 492.815153
KPW 1038.771922
KRW 1714.698012
KWD 0.353939
KYD 0.959025
KZT 554.50428
LAK 24695.742965
LBP 103230.386068
LKR 358.370781
LRD 210.596336
LSL 19.262967
LTL 3.40786
LVL 0.698125
LYD 7.380713
MAD 10.807029
MDL 20.075604
MGA 4806.971373
MKD 61.658341
MMK 2423.859761
MNT 4125.451781
MOP 9.288979
MRU 46.286555
MUR 53.805255
MVR 17.831543
MWK 2004.732168
MXN 20.373478
MYR 4.52077
MZN 73.760321
NAD 19.262575
NGN 1561.405647
NIO 42.379283
NOK 11.063172
NPR 170.039116
NZD 1.969052
OMR 0.44376
PAB 1.153188
PEN 3.94426
PGK 4.963644
PHP 69.028664
PKR 322.29194
PLN 4.26136
PYG 7460.224439
QAR 4.205087
RON 5.093888
RSD 117.41474
RUB 95.070643
RWF 1683.882559
SAR 4.333138
SBD 9.285224
SCR 16.472922
SDG 693.635342
SEK 10.706002
SGD 1.472688
SHP 0.8659
SLE 28.391892
SLL 24201.640544
SOS 656.519751
SRD 43.42429
STD 23888.258553
STN 24.497553
SVC 10.069259
SYP 127.96572
SZL 19.262124
THB 37.301872
TJS 11.030575
TMT 4.051013
TND 3.384495
TOP 2.778879
TRY 51.033419
TTD 7.808201
TWD 36.781758
TZS 3010.825447
UAH 50.563121
UGX 4352.843167
USD 1.154135
UYU 46.875638
UZS 14008.314214
VES 516.830947
VND 30353.743184
VUV 138.019678
WST 3.178729
XAF 655.976735
XAG 0.014505
XAU 0.00023
XCD 3.119107
XCG 2.074053
XDR 0.815825
XOF 658.432219
XPF 119.331742
YER 275.31915
ZAR 19.247972
ZMK 10388.594502
ZMW 22.446675
ZWL 371.63091
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • CMSC

    -0.0400

    22.95

    -0.17%

  • RYCEF

    0.3800

    16.5

    +2.3%

  • BCE

    0.1100

    26.01

    +0.42%

  • NGG

    -0.4700

    90.42

    -0.52%

  • JRI

    -0.0800

    12.46

    -0.64%

  • CMSD

    -0.0700

    22.88

    -0.31%

  • GSK

    -0.3600

    53.41

    -0.67%

  • RIO

    -0.0600

    89.8

    -0.07%

  • BCC

    1.2000

    72.92

    +1.65%

  • RELX

    -0.1800

    34.29

    -0.52%

  • VOD

    0.1500

    14.75

    +1.02%

  • BP

    0.9500

    43.85

    +2.17%

  • AZN

    -0.7200

    191.29

    -0.38%

  • BTI

    -0.3900

    60.55

    -0.64%

China's 2025 economic growth likely slowest in decades: analysts
China's 2025 economic growth likely slowest in decades: analysts / Photo: WANG ZHAO - AFP

China's 2025 economic growth likely slowest in decades: analysts

China's economy likely grew last year at its weakest rate in three decades, outside of the pandemic, according to an AFP survey of analysts ahead of official data on Monday.

Text size:

The world's second-largest economy struggled to shore up its property market while boosting domestic consumption as Chinese exports to the key US market were crimped by Donald Trump's tariffs.

President Xi Jinping said last month that growth probably met an annual target of "around five percent" in 2025.

Economists estimated a median figure of 4.9 percent, in what would be the weakest growth since 1990 when China was under Western sanctions after the deadly Tiananmen Square crackdown.

The announcement will be "close enough for officials to declare victory" in meeting the roughly five-percent number, a "political comfort blanket" for Beijing, said Sarah Tan of Moody's Analytics.

But the composition of Chinese growth was "deeply uneven" and official figures "mask the weak sentiment on the ground", she said.

Analysts agreed the main problem was China's property sector, which has failed to overcome a persistent debt crisis despite rate cuts and loosened restrictions on homebuying.

House prices have risen slightly in some large cities but the broader market remains sluggish.

"We see no sign of a near-term property sector bottoming out," analysts from Goldman Sachs said.

Without bolder measures like converting housing stock into affordable homes, the industry will remain unstable, analysts warned.

- Waning investments -

Investments in property and infrastructure likely took a hit last year.

Official figures already show that fixed-asset investment slowed 2.6 percent between January and November, its sharpest rate since 2020.

Larry Hu and Yuxiao Zhang of Macquarie Group attributed the decline to unannounced "data revisions" by Beijing, adding they did not expect policymakers to respond.

Property investment could fall by 12 percent in 2026, they predicted.

Tianchen Xu of the Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) also forecast a real-estate "correction" in 2026, adding: "This will remain a drag on growth."

Meanwhile, constraints on local government finances pushed a wider slowdown in manufacturing and infrastructure investment last year, Goldman Sachs analysts said.

China's outbound foreign direct investment continued to outpace inbound flows in recent quarters, they noted.

- Too anxious to spend -

Domestic spending is also cause for concern. Retail sales, a key indicator of consumption, grew at their slowest pace in nearly three years in November.

Economists have long urged Beijing to move towards a growth model powered by consumption rather than exports and manufacturing.

Excess supply remains an issue in manufacturing despite a government campaign last year to combat overcapacity and price cutting.

China aims to become a global powerhouse in advanced manufacturing, but that promises little for domestic spending, according to Goldman Sachs analysts.

"High-end manufacturing and frontier technology will not generate many jobs or lead to significantly higher incomes for average households, making only a limited contribution to private consumption," they said.

Chinese consumers remain jittery about the wider economy and high unemployment, even though officials have relaxed fiscal policy and subsidised the replacement of household items in a sputtering bid to boost spending.

"That anxiety is shaping how households spend," Tan said, noting that while domestic tourism rebounded to pre-pandemic levels last year, the average outlay per traveller was lower.

- Minimal US impact -

Robust exports have been a bright spot in the cloudy economic picture despite a bruising trade war with the United States that saw Trump slap steep tariffs on Chinese products.

Official data showed Chinese exports to the United States plunged by 20 percent in 2025, but that had little impact on demand for Chinese products elsewhere.

China's trade surplus hit a record $1.2 trillion last year, with officials lauding a "new historical high" filled by other trade partners.

"The trade war 2.0 didn't impact China much, leading Beijing to refrain from implementing major stimulus measures," said Hu and Zhang of Macquarie.

Tan agreed that "exports are propping up the economy while consumers and property developers hang back".

But whether they continue to drive the economy in 2026 remains to be seen.

Economists expect Beijing to reveal new stimulus measures -- potentially at its annual parliamentary session in March -- to address core challenges.

"We think there will be a turnaround this year driven by policy support from fiscal and new financing policy tools," said Erin Xin at HSBC.

Xu, of the EIU, predicated that fiscal policy would be "expansionary by historical standards" for China to reach its growth target.

Macquarie analysts, however, were more conservative, saying "the size of the stimulus package will largely depend on the magnitude of the export slowdown".

H.El-Qemzy--DT