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Economy & MarketsWednesday, July 15, 2026

China’s Economy Grows 4.3% in Q2, Slowest Since 2022, Missing Target

Exports surge but property crisis and weak consumption drag growth below the government’s 4.5–5 per cent range, raising pressure for stimulus ahead of a key party meeting.

China’s economy expanded by 4.3 per cent in the second quarter from a year earlier, the National Bureau of Statistics reported on Wednesday, undershooting the government’s 4.5–5 per cent target and marking the weakest quarterly performance since the final months of 2022. The slowdown, sharper than the 4.5 per cent forecast by economists, came despite a 27 per cent surge in exports in June, highlighting the growing divergence between external demand and a domestic economy weighed down by a prolonged property slump and cautious consumers.

Exports of semiconductors, electric vehicles and data-processing equipment have boomed, fuelled by global investment in artificial intelligence infrastructure. Yet that strength has not spilled over into the broader economy. Fixed-asset investment contracted by 5.7 per cent in the first half, with real estate investment plunging 18 per cent. Retail sales edged up 1 per cent in June after a decline in May, but spending on big-ticket items such as cars fell sharply. The result is an economy increasingly reliant on selling goods abroad while domestic engines of growth sputter.

In Beijing, the data will dominate a forthcoming Politburo meeting, where officials are expected to debate whether to accelerate fiscal spending or introduce new stimulus. Premier Li Qiang this week called for “additional policies” to be prepared, though the central bank has signalled no urgency to ease further. Analysts in Shanghai note that the official growth target was lowered in March precisely to give policymakers room to acknowledge structural weaknesses, and that the headline figure may partly reflect a greater willingness to report reality rather than a sudden collapse. From Washington, the IMF recently raised its 2026 forecast for China to 4.6 per cent but sees growth slowing to 4.1 per cent in 2027. European and American trade partners watch warily: China’s export machine, while a lifeline for its own economy, is deepening trade imbalances and fuelling protectionist pressures.

The immediate focus turns to the Politburo gathering later in July. Any signal of large-scale infrastructure spending or consumption vouchers would be closely parsed, but many economists expect only targeted measures. The longer the property sector remains in distress and household confidence stays low, the harder it will be for exports alone to sustain growth within the official range. The next milestone is the meeting’s readout, which will reveal whether Beijing opts for a more activist fiscal stance or continues to rely on gradual, sector-specific support.

Divergence — who tells it how
Axis: Giudizio vs. Neutralità
27%Medium
4 blocs · positions from −0.70 to 0.00
Critici del rallentamentoNeutrali tecnici
ATLRUSLATSEA
Divergence between press blocs
Atlantic / Anglosphere press−0.60critical
Russian & CIS press0.00neutral
Latin American press−0.70critical
Southeast Asian press−0.50critical
Chinese press outlets are not represented in this cluster.
Atlantic / Anglosphere press−0.60
Voice

The Atlantic West reads China's slowdown as a sign of structural fragility, warning that strong exports cannot mask deep domestic weaknesses.

Mechanismgerarchia di minacce

By accumulating negative indicators and linking them to external shocks (Iran war) and internal demand weakness, it creates an inevitable crisis narrative.

Omission

It omits the property crisis as a structural cause, focusing instead on external and demand-side factors.

AlarmSkepticism
Russian & CIS press0.00
Voice

Russia registers the data with technical detachment, presenting the slowdown as a routine statistical adjustment without judgment.

Mechanismtecnicizzazione

By presenting raw numbers without interpretation, it suggests the slowdown is normal and not alarming.

Omission

It omits the geopolitical context (Iran war) and the property crisis, presenting the data as purely statistical.

DetachmentPragmatism
Latin American press−0.70
Voice

Latin America criticizes the structural imbalances of the Chinese economy, portraying the slowdown as evidence of a systemic crisis.

Mechanismstrutturalizzazione

By emphasizing the plunge in fixed asset investment and supply-demand gaps, it paints China as an economy in structural decline.

Omission

It omits the role of strong exports and the AI boom, which partially offset the slowdown.

AlarmSkepticism
Southeast Asian press−0.50
Voice

Southeast Asia sees in China's crisis a risk to regional stability, linking the slowdown to geopolitical threats in the Strait of Hormuz.

Mechanismgeopoliticizzazione

By connecting Chinese growth to export dependence and the Hormuz threat, it transforms an economic data point into a security issue.

Omission

It omits the positive contribution of EV and AI exports, focusing solely on risks.

AlarmPragmatism

Broaden your view

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Upd. 02:02 PM12 languages · 28 outlets
PreviousEconomy & MarketsNext
28 outlets|12 languages|2 min read
Wednesday, July 15, 2026

China’s Economy Grows 4.3% in Q2, Slowest Since 2022, Missing Target

Exports surge but property crisis and weak consumption drag growth below the government’s 4.5–5 per cent range, raising pressure for stimulus ahead of a key party meeting.

China’s economy expanded by 4.3 per cent in the second quarter from a year earlier, the National Bureau of Statistics reported on Wednesday, undershooting the government’s 4.5–5 per cent target and marking the weakest quarterly performance since the final months of 2022. The slowdown, sharper than the 4.5 per cent forecast by economists, came despite a 27 per cent surge in exports in June, highlighting the growing divergence between external demand and a domestic economy weighed down by a prolonged property slump and cautious consumers.

Exports of semiconductors, electric vehicles and data-processing equipment have boomed, fuelled by global investment in artificial intelligence infrastructure. Yet that strength has not spilled over into the broader economy. Fixed-asset investment contracted by 5.7 per cent in the first half, with real estate investment plunging 18 per cent. Retail sales edged up 1 per cent in June after a decline in May, but spending on big-ticket items such as cars fell sharply. The result is an economy increasingly reliant on selling goods abroad while domestic engines of growth sputter.

In Beijing, the data will dominate a forthcoming Politburo meeting, where officials are expected to debate whether to accelerate fiscal spending or introduce new stimulus. Premier Li Qiang this week called for “additional policies” to be prepared, though the central bank has signalled no urgency to ease further. Analysts in Shanghai note that the official growth target was lowered in March precisely to give policymakers room to acknowledge structural weaknesses, and that the headline figure may partly reflect a greater willingness to report reality rather than a sudden collapse. From Washington, the IMF recently raised its 2026 forecast for China to 4.6 per cent but sees growth slowing to 4.1 per cent in 2027. European and American trade partners watch warily: China’s export machine, while a lifeline for its own economy, is deepening trade imbalances and fuelling protectionist pressures.

The immediate focus turns to the Politburo gathering later in July. Any signal of large-scale infrastructure spending or consumption vouchers would be closely parsed, but many economists expect only targeted measures. The longer the property sector remains in distress and household confidence stays low, the harder it will be for exports alone to sustain growth within the official range. The next milestone is the meeting’s readout, which will reveal whether Beijing opts for a more activist fiscal stance or continues to rely on gradual, sector-specific support.

Divergence — who tells it how
Axis: Giudizio vs. Neutralità
27%Medium
4 blocs · positions from −0.70 to 0.00
Critici del rallentamentoNeutrali tecnici
ATLRUSLATSEA
Divergence between press blocs
Atlantic / Anglosphere press−0.60critical
Russian & CIS press0.00neutral
Latin American press−0.70critical
Southeast Asian press−0.50critical
Chinese press outlets are not represented in this cluster.
Atlantic / Anglosphere press−0.60
Voice

The Atlantic West reads China's slowdown as a sign of structural fragility, warning that strong exports cannot mask deep domestic weaknesses.

Mechanismgerarchia di minacce

By accumulating negative indicators and linking them to external shocks (Iran war) and internal demand weakness, it creates an inevitable crisis narrative.

Omission

It omits the property crisis as a structural cause, focusing instead on external and demand-side factors.

AlarmSkepticism
Russian & CIS press0.00
Voice

Russia registers the data with technical detachment, presenting the slowdown as a routine statistical adjustment without judgment.

Mechanismtecnicizzazione

By presenting raw numbers without interpretation, it suggests the slowdown is normal and not alarming.

Omission

It omits the geopolitical context (Iran war) and the property crisis, presenting the data as purely statistical.

DetachmentPragmatism
Latin American press−0.70
Voice

Latin America criticizes the structural imbalances of the Chinese economy, portraying the slowdown as evidence of a systemic crisis.

Mechanismstrutturalizzazione

By emphasizing the plunge in fixed asset investment and supply-demand gaps, it paints China as an economy in structural decline.

Omission

It omits the role of strong exports and the AI boom, which partially offset the slowdown.

AlarmSkepticism
Southeast Asian press−0.50
Voice

Southeast Asia sees in China's crisis a risk to regional stability, linking the slowdown to geopolitical threats in the Strait of Hormuz.

Mechanismgeopoliticizzazione

By connecting Chinese growth to export dependence and the Hormuz threat, it transforms an economic data point into a security issue.

Omission

It omits the positive contribution of EV and AI exports, focusing solely on risks.

AlarmPragmatism

This story appeared in

28 outlets · 12 languages

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