By Lightspring @ Shutterstock.com

China’s economy is weakening, and that weakening is becoming a drag on its neighbors’ economies as well. Bloomberg’s Claire Jiao reports:

Manufacturing across most of Asia deteriorated further in June as a weak Chinese economy sapped demand for the regionโ€™s goods.

Factory activity remained stuck in contraction in neighboring economies South Korea, Japan and Taiwan, according to manufacturing purchasing managersโ€™ indexes published Monday by S&P Global and au Jibun Bank.

Much of Asiaโ€™s manufacturing sector had pinned its hopes on a strong Chinese post-pandemic rebound, only to see weaker-than-expected trade with the worldโ€™s second largest economy. With a similarly sluggish global economy, damped by high borrowing costs and elevated inflation, factories are struggling to find a catalyst for growth.

South Koreaโ€™s PMI fell further to 47.8 in June, while Japanโ€™s reading slipped back below 50, which separates expansion from contraction, as it dropped to 49.8 from 50.6 in May. Taiwanโ€™s PMI inched up slightly but still marked a 13th straight month of shrinking activity.

โ€œIt seems unlikely the sector will move back into recovery until we see improvements in global economic conditions and stronger demand across key markets such as Europe and the US,โ€ S&P Global Market Intelligenceโ€™s Annabel Fiddes said of Taiwan.

The malaise has spread further down the region, with Vietnam and Malaysiaโ€™s manufacturing extending contractions. Factory activity in the Philippines and Myanmar expanded at a slower pace on weaker output while regionโ€™s-best Thailand saw its PMI plunge to 53.2 from 58.2.

Read more here.