China’s manufacturing PMI recovery showed clear improvement in May as production increased and market confidence began to strengthen. According to the National Bureau of Statistics, the index rose to 49.5, up 0.5 points from April. Though still below the 50-point threshold, the steady rise suggests that manufacturing conditions are gradually stabilising. Large enterprises led the rebound with their PMI reaching 50.7, reflecting renewed expansion after a difficult start to the year. NBS statistician Zhao Qinghe linked the gains to faster production and more optimistic expectations across industrial sectors.
The production sub-index climbed to 50.7, marking a 0.9-point rise from April. New orders followed closely, hitting 49.8, up 0.6 points, hinting at stronger future output. High-tech manufacturing stood out with continued growth, hitting 50.9 for the fourth month in a row. Equipment manufacturing and consumer goods also expanded, reaching 51.2 and 50.2, respectively. These figures suggest that targeted industrial support is starting to yield measurable outcomes.
China’s manufacturing PMI recovery has largely benefited from macroeconomic policies rolled out earlier this year. Zhao confirmed that the production and business activity expectation index increased to 52.5 in May. This optimism points to broader belief in near-term economic gains across the industrial landscape. While small firms still face pressure, large and high-tech enterprises seem to be pulling ahead. Business confidence remains cautious but is gaining traction as output stabilises and demand gradually recovers.
Beyond the factory floor, non-manufacturing data painted a mixed picture. The non-manufacturing PMI dropped slightly to 50.3 from 50.4 in April. Despite this dip, services continued to benefit from holiday tourism and rising consumer activity. Catering and domestic travel helped support service sector growth during the May Day holiday. Zhao noted that service sector demand remained relatively resilient through the month.
Looking ahead, analysts argue China must sustain internal demand while expanding global trade ties. Wen Tao from the China Logistics Information Center urged high-level reforms and market openness. He stressed that supporting high-tech sectors could create new sources of growth. China’s manufacturing PMI recovery, if maintained, could reinforce economic resilience. Authorities now face pressure to deepen structural reforms while safeguarding short-term momentum.