1. China's economic performance in the first half of the year showed mixed results. GDP grew 4.7% year-over-year, with a strong 5.0% in the first quarter but cooling to 4.3% in the second quarter [para. 1]. Beneath the headline slowdown, a profound and uneven structural transformation is underway [para. 2].
2. Four distinct bright spots emerged in the second quarter. First, nominal GDP growth recovered to 5.9%, outpacing real GDP due to stabilizing producer prices, which aided corporate profits and household incomes [para. 3]. Second, the economy followed a "U-shaped" recovery, with production accelerating in May and June after an April dip, driven by export orders and emerging industries like AI and electronics [para. 4]. Third, China's transition to new growth drivers accelerated, with high-tech manufacturing and electronics value-added output surging 14.0% and 16.1%, respectively, while new-economy sectors contributed over 40% to overall growth [para. 5]. Fourth, robust exports surged 17.6% in the first half, marked by a structural upgrade toward technology-intensive goods and a geographic pivot to emerging markets [para. 6].
3. However, the transition caused significant pain, creating a "tale of two economies" with four structural divergences. First, supply vastly outpaced demand: industrial production grew 5.4% but retail sales crawled at 1.3%, and fixed-asset investment contracted 5.7%, relying heavily on foreign demand [para. 7][para. 8]. Second, the gap between emerging and traditional sectors widened, as advanced manufacturing growth could not offset deep contractions in real estate, cement, and traditional raw materials [para. 9]. Third, the recovery was uneven: median income lagged behind average disposable income, and large manufacturing firms expanded while small businesses faced operational pressures [para. 10]. Fourth, regional disparities sharpened, with coastal hubs booming due to AI and electronics, while regions reliant on traditional industries or real estate struggled [para. 11].
4. The second-quarter slowdown was primarily driven by traditional sectors. The secondary industry (manufacturing and construction) dragged growth, with global energy volatility squeezing chemical margins and tighter coal mining regulation constraining output [para. 12]. Additionally, real estate investment dropped 18% and infrastructure investment fell 2.4%, depressing construction and durable goods demand [para. 13].
5. Looking ahead to the second half, GDP is expected to follow a "U-shaped" trajectory, rebounding to around 4.5% in Q3 and 4.8% in Q4, with full-year expansion near 4.7% [para. 14]. Tailwinds include export resilience, fiscal expansion through government bonds for infrastructure, AI, and green energy projects, and policy implementation like consumer trade-in initiatives and the 15th Five-Year Plan [para. 15][para. 16]. However, risks remain: potential trade policy adjustments from the Trump administration and geopolitical conflicts could disrupt supply chains [para. 17]. Domestically, the property market continues to suppress local government revenues and household wealth [para. 18]. The ultimate success of China's transition depends on whether corporate profitability in high-tech sectors translates into broader employment and wage growth for the middle class [para. 19].
AI generated, for reference only