LOGIN | MEMBER | SITEMAP | CONTACT US
 
 
Focus  News about Taiwan  Daily News  Latest Update  
Special Reports  Comments Weekly Brief 
Press Conference of Taiwan Affairs Office of the State Council
Focus
 
News about Taiwan
 
   Daily News
 
Latest Updates
 
Weekly Brief
 
Special Reports
 
Press Conference of Taiwan Affairs Office of the State Council
China's January inflation figure beats forecast
   晩豚: 2011-02-16 16:20         ン: 醴         輳苅 China Daily

 

(Photo: China Daily)

BEIJING, Feb. 16 (Xinhuanet) -- The consumer price index (CPI), a major gauge of inflation, grew a lower-than-expected 4.9 percent year-on-year in January but economists warned that inflation remains a threat that may lead to further monetary tightening policies.

Food prices, which account for about a third of the basket of goods in the CPI calculation, surged 10.3 percent year-on-year.

The latest inflation figure, up from December's 4.6 percent, was close to November's 28-month high of 5.1 percent, according to the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) on Tuesday.

The surprisingly low figure - compared to market expectations of at least 5 percent - was announced after the NBS said it had reduced the weighting of food prices in the CPI by 2.21 percentage points and increased that of living costs by 4.22 percentage points as home prices rocketed.

The bureau said the adjustment added 0.024 percentage points to January's figure, and denied claims that it had dragged down the figure by 0.3 percentage points.

The NBS said it regularly adjusts the composition of the CPI basket.

In a sign of accumulating pressures, soaring global commodity costs pushed producer prices up 6.6 percent in the year to January, accelerating from 5.9 percent in December and well above the 6.1 percent rise forecast by analysts.

"The large increase in the producer price index (PPI) suggests that price pressures will remain uncomfortably strong, at least for the next few months," Reuters quoted Brian Jackson, economist with the Royal Bank of Canada in Hong Kong as saying.

The NBS attributed the rising prices in January to the lunar new year's demand boom and the severe cold weather in many parts of the country, which cut grain and vegetable production.

"The extremely cold weather and the Spring Festival holiday spending pushed prices up 1 percent from a month ago," it said on its website.

"Although the newly released figure was lower than forecast, inflation will persist for the rest of the year," said Zuo Xiaolei, chief economist at China Galaxy Securities.

The central bank raised interest rates on Feb 8 for the third time since mid-October, indicating more aggressive monetary tightening policies may be in the pipeline.

To mop up excessive liquidity in the market, Beijing has also raised the required reserve ratios for banks seven times since January 2010 and ordered them to tighten credit.

"Those tightening measures are just a beginning," Nomura Securities said in a report.

"China is expected to increase interest rates by 100 basis points this year, and by 125 basis points in 2012," Nomura said.

Price pressures persist as Chinese banks loaned out 1.04 trillion yuan ($157 billion) in January, double the amount for December. The country's total money supply increased 53 percent in the last two years.

Yao Wei, an economist with the Paris-based Societe Generale, said China is expected to raise the reserve ratio for banks several times this year along with two interest rate hikes in the first half of this year.

In addition, the Chinese currency "will continue to appreciate to ease inflation", said Chen Zhiwu, professor with the Yale School of Management.

Despite all the factors pushing up inflation, the government should be able to keep prices under control, Xinhua quoted Ba Shusong, a researcher with the Development Research Center of the State Council, as saying.

He said prices were usually high in the run-up to the Spring Festival holidays, but government measures would take hold and prices would stabilize. China has set a goal to limit inflation to 4 percent this year.

Lu Ting, an economist with the Bank of America-Merrill Lynch, expected a moderate decline in the CPI in February.

 

  臥心/l燕u
 
o鮪}猟n
Copyright Chinataiwan.org .All Rights Reserved
娼瞳消消消消消消涙鷹| 嶄猟忖鳥冉巖涙濛| 嶄竃繁曇嶄猟忖鳥涙鷹| 寄仇彿坿嶄猟壓濆杰潅盞儖 | 嶄猟忖鳥冉巖秤99壓| 涙鷹涙孳飢嗽寄嗽訪嗽仔議篇撞| 恷除厚仟嶄猟忖鳥壓| 怜匚冉巖av喟消涙鷹娼瞳| 消消消消消涙鷹Av撹繁唹垪| 涙鷹繁曇戟諾母絃曝BBBBXXXX| 嶄猟涙鷹消消娼瞳| 涙鷹廨曝匯va冉巖v廨曝壓 | 冉巖av涙鷹廨曝壓濆杰緩愴| 冉巖VA嶄猟忖鳥涙鷹谷頭| 冉巖嶄猟涙昆忽r雫窮唹| 晩昆娼瞳匯曝屈曝眉曝嶄猟| 涙鷹篇撞壓濂シ賭散眉曝| 忽恢一巷片蜘慕涙鷹娼瞳99| 冉巖AV喟消涙鷹娼瞳邦釘唹篇| 嶄猟忖鳥匯曝屈曝窒継 | 忽恢撹繁冉巖忝栽涙鷹| 天胆娼瞳某沃消消消嶄猟忖鳥| 晩昆娼瞳消消涙鷹嶄猟忖鳥| 冉巖娼瞳天胆娼瞳嶄猟忖鳥| 冉巖忽恢91娼瞳涙鷹廨曝| 撹繁涙鷹篇撞97窒継| 忽恢岱絃涙鷹寄頭壓濆杰| 娼瞳眉雫AV涙鷹匯曝| 冉巖天胆撹繁消消忝栽嶄猟利| 冉巖Av涙鷹岱鷹壓濂シ| AA曝匯曝屈曝眉涙鷹娼頭| 涙鷹忽恢娼瞳匯曝屈曝窒継3p | 爺銘彿坿8嶄猟恷仟井| 忽恢匯曝屈曝嶄猟忖鳥| 涙鷹嶄猟忖鳥岱壓濆杰| 消消消消消消繁曇涙鷹嶄猟忖鳥卯| 爺銘а壓炒侘辻斛瀰属| а〔爺銘嶄猟郊利8| 爺銘а〔嶄猟壓| 晩昆va嶄猟忖鳥涙鷹窮唹| 嶄忽涙鷹繁曇戟諾母絃転転罷周|