China’s GDP growth to slow down to 4.6% reflecting subdued consumer sentiment: UN report

10 months ago


China's GDP growth to slow down to 4.6% reflecting subdued consumer sentiment: UN report

The United Nations revised its global economic growth forecast downward to 2.4% for 2025, down from 2.9 in 2024, warning that rising trade tensions, looming policy uncertainty, and geopolitical volatility are weighing down the world economy to a fragile position.The report also showed a slowdown in major economies. In China, the economy is expected to grow at 4.6% from 5% in 2024, dragged down by weak consumer demand, disrupted export-oriented manufacturing and challenges in the property sector.Despite solid growth in the first quarter, net exports are expected to push down the overall growth in 2025 due to tariff-related shocks. However, policy measures introduced in March 2025, aimed at boosting consumption, encouraging investment, and stabilizing the property market are likely to cushion the impact.Recently, in a bid to boost domestic demand amid growing external pressures, the People’s Bank of China cut policy rates. Alongside this, it also launched a more ambitious fiscal expansion, increasing the fiscal deficit from 3% of GDP in 2024 to 4% in 2025, to fund a variety of measures.In the longer term, advancing structural reforms to drive the economy toward domestic consumption remains crucial for sustained resilience.The report showed that unemployment in the country increased modestly during early 2025 and increasing US tariffs were further expected to pressurise the export oriented industries even more.It further said that China, a large economy, has seen wage gains in recent years.

Global front

The report says that emerging economies such as Brazil, Mexico, and South Africa are also seeing downward revisions, as falling commodity prices and weaker investment weigh on their prospects.According to the report, the global economy remains fragile amid rising trade tensions and policy uncertainty. It also warned that a sharp rise in US tariffs could drive up production costs, disrupt global supply chains, and heighten financial instability.

Keep exploring EU Venture Capital:  China's med-tech industry corners a big global market pie while India still explores





Source link

EU Venture Capital

EU Venture Capital is a premier platform providing in-depth insights, funding opportunities, and market analysis for the European startup ecosystem. Wholly owned by EU Startup News, it connects entrepreneurs, investors, and industry professionals with the latest trends, expert resources, and exclusive reports in venture capital.

Don't Miss

US growth likely to slow to 1.6% this year, hobbled by Trump’s trade wars, OECD says

WASHINGTON — U.S. economic growth will slow to 1.6% this year from

Amidst trade war, Donald Trump says he will ‘always like’ China’s Xi Jinping, but adds he is ‘extremely hard to … ’

NEW DELHI: US President Donald Trump on Wednesday described Chinese President Xi