China’s manufacturing (EC11CHPM) contracted for a second month in December as global growth faltered and Premier Wen Jiabao prolonged a crackdown on speculation in the housing market, a purchasing managers' index indicated. The index was at 48.7 in December, HSBC Holdings Plc and Markit Economics said today. That compared with a preliminary result of 49 reported on Dec. 15 and a final reading of 47.7 for November. A reading above 50 indicates expansion. The central bank may cut lenders’ reserve requirements before a Lunar New Year holiday starting Jan. 23 that will fuel demand for cash, according to Bank of America Merrill Lynch. Last month’s half percentage-point reduction, the first since 2008, indicated that the government is putting a bigger focus on supporting growth as inflation cools. “Weakening external demand is starting to bite,” said Qu Hongbin. Policy easing may enable the world’s second-biggest economy to avoid a “hard landing,” he said. In November, China’s export growth was the weakest since 2009, excluding seasonal distortions at the start of each year, as Europe’s debt crisis capped demand.

Most of the decline has been caused by Beijing’s initiatives to fight the inflationary demands that have came with the fast speed of development.
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