Rise in China Inflation Points to Stimulus Efforts
December 08 2015 - 10:20PM
Dow Jones News
BEIJING—China's consumer inflation rose in November, as higher
food, consumer and property prices suggested that Beijing's bid to
spur growth in the world's second-largest economy is having some
effect.
While the moderately higher consumer-price index and
better-than-expected November imports could help China reach its
annual 2015 growth target of about 7% -- which would be its slowest
pace in a quarter century—it is too early to predict an economic
upturn, analysts said.
"There's a possibility that long-expected fiscal spending is
starting to kick in, although it certainly doesn't portend a
massive turnaround," said IG Markets Ltd. analyst Angus Nicholson.
The trade and inflation figures "suggest a little pick up in
November and into December that should give them enough to say
they've hit their 7% figure on the dot," he added.
Inflation has become less of a political issue in recent years
as price pressure has weakened, giving policy makers more room to
ease monetary policy.
While prices bounce up and down a bit these days they are
generally under control, said Qi Min, a 33-year old employee
working at a Beijing high-tech company. "If there's something that
becomes significantly more expensive, I buy less of it and find a
substitute," she said, emerging from a Beijing supermarket with her
baby son in the shopping cart. "But nowadays most prices seems
acceptable," she added.
China's consumer-price index rose 1.5% in November from a year
earlier, an increase from its 1.3% rise in October, the National
Bureau of Statistics reported on Wednesday. The rise -- which was
fairly broad based, affecting food, health care, recreation,
education and real estate -- exceeded the median 1.4% gain forecast
by 14 economists in a survey by The Wall Street Journal.
China's producer-price index dropped 5.9% in November from a
year earlier, a level unchanged from October, the agency said. This
is the 45th consecutive month of declining prices at the factory
gate as producers battle weak demand, stiff price competition and
lower global commodity prices.
"Chinese factories are still struggling with overcapacity
problems," said RHB economist Zhang Fan.
The November inflation data follows a string of weak numbers
last month. Foreign exchange reserves fell by a
larger-than-expected amount, exports declined, an index of
manufacturing activity weakened and state-owned enterprise profits
fell by nearly 10%. But imports posted a better-than-expected 8.7%
year-over-year decline last month compared with an 18.8% fall in
October.
Efforts to boost demand over the past year have included
stepped-up infrastructure spending, six interest rate cuts and
several reductions in required bank reserves, all with limited
effect.
Capital Economics said it expects to see upward price pressure
next year amid strong wage growth, rising pork prices, moderately
higher property prices and continued monetary policy easing. "We
expect inflation to increase further in 2016," Capital Economics
said in a research note.
Grace Zhu contributed to this article.
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
December 08, 2015 23:05 ET (04:05 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2015 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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