Manufacturing PMIs conflict but economists see robust growth
Manufacturing growth on the mainland fell again last month because of inflation and concerns about government tightening measures, according to the latest official Purchasing Managers' Index.
The PMI, complied by the China Federation of Logistics and Purchasing on behalf of the National Bureau of Statistics, recorded a modest fall to 52.9 in January from 53.9 in December, which was a further drop from 55.2 in November.
January's figures were well below economists' consensus of 53.5.
However, a competing survey, the HSBC/Markit PMI, indicated an increase to 54.5 in January from 54.4 in December, suggesting solid improvement in the manufacturing sector. HSBC surveyed more than 430 manufacturing companies; the official mainland report surveyed more than 800 manufacturing companies.
A figure higher than 50 indicates growth, while a value below 50 is a sign of contraction.
Economists agreed that growth momentum on the mainland was still robust and anticipated quantitative tightening measures from the government amid strong inflationary pressure.