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China’s Cogs in the Global Supply Chain Are Struggling to Restart

To contain the crisis, Chinese authorities have ordered city lockdowns and extended holidays but the human impact is unrelenting.

China’s Cogs in the Global Supply Chain Are Struggling to Restart
The Goodman Interlink building, where the Deutsche Post DHL Supply Chain MegaHub is housed, center, stands near shipping containers in Hong Kong, China. (Photographer: Jerome Favre/Bloomberg)  

(Bloomberg) --

Global supply chains look to be suffering longer-than-expected disruptions tied to coronavirus as China’s government tries to nudge idled factories back to work to limit the damage to the world’s second-largest economy.

To contain the crisis, Chinese authorities have ordered city lockdowns and extended holidays but the human impact is unrelenting, with deaths topping 1,000. The economic fallout could extend well into March with rising numbers of bankruptcies, increasing layoffs and worsening demand, according to economists at Nomura in Hong Kong.

Bloomberg is reporting that thousands of businesses are in limbo, waiting to hear from local authorities on when they can resume operations. Even when they get the all-clear, it might take days to get back to full staff because many workers who went home for the Lunar New Year holidays are stuck there because of travel restrictions.

The government expects that 160 million more people will return to work between now and  Feb. 18, the transport ministry said Tuesday. That’s about the size of the entire American workforce.

The impact to China’s economy will be short term and won’t derail its longer-term improvement, CCTV reported Monday, citing President Xi Jinping. China will strengthen controls on economic operations and monitor employment to avoid large-scale layoffs, it said. Chinese policy makers will likely roll out more measures to support the economy.

Regions less hit by the outbreak should accelerate the resumption of production, according to a national televised conference held by Ministry of Industry and Information Technology. Bigger enterprises should make up for lost production and ensure provincial targets are met. It is “very urgent” to resume industrial production and stabilize expectations, the government said.

Goldman Sachs, UBS and Macquarie are among those cutting their growth forecasts for both the first quarter and the full year. According to Bloomberg Economics, “the combination of rising cases and extreme prevention measures seems set to guarantee a significant drop in first-quarter GDP growth,” and “our scenario analysis flags the risk of a slowdown to 4.5%.”

The risks are rippling beyond the Chinese economy, particularly with global production of automobiles and electronics. Companies including Nissan, Hyundai and Kia Motors have already slowed output. And this was just reported Tuesday: A car-parts supplier became one of the earliest known companies to obtain a “force majeure” certificate in China that may help it avoid penalties for breaching contract obligations for circumstances beyond its control.

Charting the Trade War

China’s Cogs in the Global Supply Chain Are Struggling to Restart

The Trump administration is changing a key exemption to America’s trade-remedy laws to make it easier to penalize about two dozen so-called developing countries including China, India and South Africa. The U.S. narrowed its internal list of developing and least-developed countries in order to reduce the threshold for triggering a U.S. investigation into whether nations are harming U.S. industries with unfairly subsidized exports.

Today’s Must Reads

  • Brexit bargaining | The U.K. will need to go further than Canada in its commitments to the EU if it wants to trade without tariffs and quotas, the European Commission president warned.
  • Shifting priorities | U.S. officials are signaling the EU might still be the easier target than the U.K. for a quick outcome aimed at avoiding a transatlantic tariff battle.
  • Spying trouble | A U.S. indictment of Chinese military personnel over one of the biggest data thefts in U.S. history highlights a key source of animosity after their “phase one” trade deal.
  • Supply squeeze | Indonesia is grappling with surging garlic prices as the fast-spreading coronavirus spurs fears over supply disruptions in China.
  • Stephanomics podcast | Thomas Piketty made a big splash in 2014 with his best-selling book, “Capital in the Twenty-First Century,” stirring debate about how capitalism has benefited the wealthy. Get a sneak preview of his new book — “Capital and Ideology” — from the author himself with this bonus episode of our podcast.

Economic Analysis

  • Lonely travelers | Virus to cause sharp drop in Chinese tourism and other services through much of 2020.
  • Lingering headwinds | Virus may postpone Japan’s tech-parts recovery until the summer.

Coming Up

  • Feb. 14: EU trade balance
  • Feb. 19: Japan trade balance
  • Feb. 21: South Korea 20-day exports and imports
  • Britain’s departure from the EU on Jan. 31 marked the start of a new, more complex phase of the negotiations. Click here for a timeline to the year ahead.

--With assistance from James Mayger.

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Zoe Schneeweiss at zschneeweiss@bloomberg.net

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.

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