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Updated May 31, 2026 · 16:05
World News Updated May 31, 2026

China's Manufacturing Hits 3-Month Low as Exports Drop

China's manufacturing activity slowed further in May as the official PMI dropped to a three-month low of 50. New export orders contracted sharply to 48.6 due to global uncertainties from the Middle East conflict. The data highlights a growing supply-demand mismatch, with exports no longer providing the same growth momentum. Meanwhile, several EU countries are pushing for stronger trade measures against Chinese industrial overcapacity.

China's manufacturing sector slows further as exports contract

Beijing, May 31

China's manufacturing activity slowed further in May as new export orders contracted and input costs kept rising, according to a survey by the country's National Bureau of Statistics released on Sunday.

The official manufacturing purchasing managers' index (PMI) dropped to a three-month low of 50 from 50.3 in April, with the 50-point mark separating growth from contraction, the data showed.

While the supply rose during the period, the demand weakened further, with the sub-indexes for production and new orders estimated at 51.2 and 49.9, respectively, in the manufacturing PMI survey.

New export orders plunged to 48.6 from 50.3 during the month amid global uncertainties due to the Middle East conflict.

The figures will add to the concerns of the Chinese government, which is increasingly being confronted by the supply-demand mismatch, as the hitherto excessive dependence on exports that was driving growth is no longer providing the earlier momentum.

Other countries are also taking steps to check the flood of cheap Chinese goods that is hurting growth and employment in their domestic economies.

Major EU member countries are working towards taking stronger measures to prevent their economies from being hit by the flood of cheap goods from countries with "industrial overcapacity" such as China, according to a report in the South China Morning Post.

"A paper signed by Spain, Italy, the Netherlands, France and Lithuania days before a major China-focused debate in Brussels said the bloc must respond more aggressively to 'systemic and structural industrial overcapacity' -- phrases often taken as shorthand for Beijing," the report states.

The intervention comes as the European Commission prepares for a China policy orientation debate on Friday, designed to chart a new course in light of growing complaints from governments and industries about the economic pressure caused by Chinese competition.

The paper, which has not been released publicly and which was first reported on by the Financial Times, calls for much more aggressive use of EU safeguard measures for sector-wide disruption, rather than product-by-product anti-dumping cases.

These allow for tariffs or quotas to be imposed where import surges are seen to be harming local industry. They have been used sparingly in the past, notably to counter surges in Chinese steel and ferroalloys, which are products used in the steel industry.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Aditya G

The fact that EU countries are gearing up to block cheap Chinese goods shows that even developed nations are feeling the heat. India has been struggling with Chinese imports for years – especially in steel and electronics. Maybe now global sentiment is shifting, and we can finally have a level playing field. 🇮🇳

Jennifer L

As someone who works in trade logistics, this PMI drop isn't surprising. The Middle East conflict has disrupted shipping routes badly. But honestly, China's over-reliance on exports was always a risk. India should take note – we need to strengthen our domestic demand to avoid similar vulnerability.

Kavya N

I'm a bit skeptical about celebrating China's slowdown. If their manufacturing contracts significantly, global supply chains could get disrupted, and India might face higher input costs too. We're all interconnected. But yes, this is a wake-up call for us to become more self-reliant. Abhi aur mehnat karni padegi! 💪

Matthew K

EU cracking down on Chinese overcapacity is long overdue. But let's be real – India also exports cheap goods, and we might face similar measures someday. Instead of just watching China stumble, we should focus on quality and innovation. Can't rely on being the 'cheapest option' forever.

Shreya B

The EU countries mentioned – Spain, Italy, Netherlands – these are major economies. If they're worried, it says a lot about China's aggressive pricing strategy. But honestly, India should use this opportunity to strengthen trade ties with Europe. We have good relations, why not capitalize on it? 🤔

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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