China's economy likely cooled in second quarter: analysts


FE Team | Published: July 11, 2026 00:27:20


China's economy likely cooled in second quarter: analysts

BEIJING, July 10 (AFP) : China's economic growth likely slowed in the second quarter of the year, according to an AFP survey, though strong exports linked to a global AI boom helped offset trade disruptions and high energy prices caused by the Middle East war.
The world's second-largest economy is increasingly reliant on foreign trade to expand as a prolonged property-sector slump and weak consumer demand continue to pose problems. The US-Israeli war on Iran threatened growth as it choked off shipping through the Strait of Hormuz -- through which a fifth of global oil and natural gas normally passes -- and sparked fears of a downturn that would have hit demand for Chinese exports.
But data Wednesday is expected to show the country's economy expanded 4.5 percent year-on-year in April-July, according to the median forecast of an AFP survey of experts.
That would represent a significant slowdown from the five percent recorded in the previous quarter but still leave the economy on track to reach the government's annual target of 4.5-5.0 percent. Dan Wang, a director on Eurasia Group's China team and one of 11 analysts surveyed by AFP, said the economy had stood up well to energy and supply chain disruptions from the Iran war.
But he added that "weaker global demand has a visible negative impact on lower-end consumer goods and small exporters".
High-tech sectors thrived, however, with industries related to artificial intelligence and renewable energy seeing "stellar performance", Wang said. China weathered a punishing trade war launched by US President Donald Trump last year to emerge with an eye-watering $1.2 trillion trade surplus in 2025, the largest on record.
Exports have surged again in the first half of this year, driven by demand for AI-related tech and automobiles, with overseas shipments up 19.4 percent on-year in May.
In the second quarter, "external demand continued to outperform despite tariffs and geopolitical uncertainty", Sheana Yue, senior economist at Oxford Economics, told AFP.

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