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Why China’s 4.3% growth is worrying its government | Explained

Why China’s 4.3% growth is worrying its government | Explained

Posted on July 15, 2026 By admin


China’s economy grew 4.3% in the second quarter of 2026, according to data released on Wednesday (July 15, 2026) by China’s National Bureau of Statistics (NBS).

With growth falling to the lowest in more than three years and below the government’s already lowered annual target of 4.5-5%, attention has turned to how the Chinese government is likely to deal with multiple challenges of a real estate slowdown, sluggish consumption, and serious challenges in the job market.

A meeting of the ruling Communist Party’s Politburo slated for July-end is likely to offer some clues. China’s surging exports have emerged as a bright spot for Beijing, while raising questions for India and other trade partners that are grappling with ever-widening trade imbalances.

What has the latest data revealed about the state of China’s economy?

China’s GDP expanded by 4.3% in the second quarter, down from 5% in the first quarter. This marked the slowest growth since 2022, when China was still in the grips of the pandemic. Significantly, growth fell below the annual target. In March 2026, China’s National People’s Congress (NPC), or Parliament, announced a 4.5-5% target for the year, which was the lowest since 1991.

Other economic indicators released on Wednesday showed a 5.7% drop in fixed-asset investment and sluggish retail sales — an important marker of consumption, which the government hopes will drive future growth for a historically investment-reliant economy.

In May, retail sales fell 0.6% from last year, another low since the pandemic. June showed a slight recovery to a 1.1% increase in retail sales of goods. Usual caveats apply about China’s economic data, which China’s former Premier Li Keqiang himself reportedly once advised were for “reference only” (and that other indicators, such as freight and power consumption, were arguably more revelatory about the state of the economy).

At the same time, it is important to note that economists still closely study China’s official data, as numbers reveal how the government wants to portray the state of the economy and may possible signal policy changes. Moreover, most economists have noted improvements in the reliability of statistics, with numbers becoming harder to fudge coinciding with the global integration of China’s economy and more transparency into the performance of Chinese companies, many of which are publicly listed.

What is driving down growth?

If real estate is about “location, location, location”, China’s slowdown story is in many ways about “real estate, real estate and real estate”. In the first half of the year, property investment fell 18%, a remarkable statistic for an economy once driven by real estate growth. This isn’t only about the property sector. The spillover effects are hard to overstate.

An entire swathe of the economy is in a slump, from construction to every related industry that has for decades relied on a booming property sector, from lighting to furniture. Then there is the psychological impact in a country where most people’s savings are locked into real estate given the low returns from regulated interest rates that make bank deposits unappealing. Investing abroad is also not an option given the tight capital controls, although the stock market has emerged as an alternative avenue despite its volatility.

This has further dampened the willingness of Chinese consumers to spend, along with other persisting anxieties such as rising healthcare and education costs. Still, there are bright spots for the Chinese economy such as the rapid growth in China’s high-tech industries and the continuing expansion of Chinese exports, from electric vehicles to most recently, an extraordinary surge in the exports of air-conditioners to Europe amid a summer heat wave. Trade still remains robust for China, growing 17% in the first half of the year. Exports grew for 11 consecutive quarters to $2.1 trillion in the first six months of the year.

How is the government likely to respond?

All eyes are on an upcoming meeting of the Politburo, the top policy-making body of the Communist Party of China, set for late July. Mao Shengyong, deputy director of the NBS, said on Wednesday the government was likely to “introduce targeted, more proactive and effective policies in response to changing circumstances”, without specifying.

Boosting domestic consumption and minimising job losses are likely to top its concerns, especially with many graduates currently entering the workforce. Urban employment remained flat at 5% in June. Mr. Mao said “efforts will be stepped up to secure the steady development of employment”, with a target to create 12 million new urban jobs in 2026, despite the concerns about hiring impacted by AI. Earlier this week, China announced a first of its kind five-year plan for consumption, with a 2030 retail sales target of 60 trillion yuan ($8.86 trillion), a 20% rise from 2025.

Addressing the property sector — the elephant in the room — is one major challenge. The government has walked a tightrope of avoiding what it calls “systemic risks” while trying to protect buyers (as it needs to, if consumption is to revive) while not bailing out many developers. This is part of an ongoing effort to reform the sector and curb speculation, after Chinese President Xi Jinping’s declaration in 2016 that “houses were for living in and not speculation”.

The broader problem for Beijing is that it’s not only property developers but local governments also have been hard hit by the slump, with real estate sales a major contributor of revenues. Many tier-two and tier-three cities have seen a major cash crunch, impacting spending on infrastructure and social services. The extent of the crunch remains unclear with some taking to fudging data to mask the state of their finances, as the Communist Party’s own anti-corruption watchdog warned recently. It cited the example of one plot of land being sold “18 times” in the southern city of Nanning “without ever changing hands”, reported the South China Morning Post, with the fudge allowing “the city government to artificially shore up its fiscal revenue by 2.83 billion yuan (US$416 million) in 2024”.

“Captivated by quick gains,” it warned, “some authorities engaged in accounting gimmicks to reflect substantial rises in fiscal revenue, masking actual budget strains.”

Published – July 15, 2026 01:49 pm IST



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