Chinese manufacturing has contracted
for the third month in a row, according to the government's latest factory
survey.
The Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI)
showed a reading of 49.8 for October, unchanged from last month.
A figure below 50 indicates that factory
activity contracted.
The most recent growth figures
showed the country's economy growing at a rate of 6.9%, the weakest rate since
the financial crisis.
It has been hit by a stock market
slump and a global slowdown in demand.
Economists had expected October's
PMI to show a pick-up to a reading of 50.
"Because of the recent weak
recovery in the global economy and downward pressure in the domestic economy,
manufacturers still face a severe import and export situation," said Zhao
Qinghe, a senior statistician at China's National Bureau of Statistics in a
statement.
The government is trying to move
away from being an export-led economy to a more consumer and services-led one.
It has been taking action to try to
spur growth, including cutting interest rates five times so far this year.
Economists at ANZ Bank said the
latest PMI survey indicated there could be further measures to come.
"While the PMI has stabilised,
it is too early to confirm a bottoming out," ANZ Bank said.
Source – bbc
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