China Gives Rare Handouts to Boost Sentiment Before Long Holiday

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(Bloomberg) -- China said it will give one-off cash handouts to residents facing hardship and vowed more benefits for some unemployed people, in a rapid-fire round of measures seeking to boost consumption and allay growing economic anxiety ahead of a key national holiday.

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The government announced the handouts and subsidies on Wednesday, a day after top officials boosted the market with a broad policy package aimed at arresting a growth slowdown that has battered consumer confidence and spurred labor protests. On the same day, Shanghai said it would issue more than 500 million yuan in consumption vouchers to encourage spending in a city as populous as Australia.

The imminent weeklong National Day break is adding pressure to boost public sentiment, as the nation of 1.4 billion people prepares to huddle with family, potentially spreading the economic gloom. The monetary easing unveiled Tuesday raised anticipation for more measures in the coming days, when President Xi Jinping’s 24-member Politburo is set to meet.

“The move is intended to showcase fiscal policy is being strengthened,” Zhaopeng Xing, senior strategist at Australia & New Zealand Banking Group, said of the cash handouts. “The ball is in the finance ministry’s court.”

Consumer stocks led gains in China and Hong Kong with a consumer staples subgauge up as much as 3.5% in the mainland, taking its advance since Tuesday to more than 12%. In Hong Kong, bar chain operator Helens International Holdings Company rose as much as a record 36%, while sportswear makers Anta Sports Products and Li Ning Company each gained at least 9%.

The Chinese government didn’t say how many people will benefit from the cash handouts or their total value in a brief statement. It called for local authorities to ensure the funds reach their recipients before Tuesday, the 75th anniversary of the founding of the People’s Republic, to show “the party and the government’s love and care for people in need.”

China’s ministries budgeted 154.7 billion yuan ($22 billion) for financial assistance and subsidies to people including those earning the lowest income, in extreme poverty, orphans and the homeless this year, according to a government notice in April. It’s unclear if the coming one-time allowance will come out of this budget.