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China Inflation Surges Amidst Weak Demand Worries
10 Dec
Summary
- Consumer inflation in China reached its highest pace in nearly two years last month.
- Rising food costs, particularly fresh vegetables, fueled the inflation surge.
- Factory-gate prices fell, indicating continued weakness in overall economic demand.

China experienced its fastest consumer inflation in almost two years last month, with the consumer price index (CPI) rising by 0.7 percent year-on-year. This increase was largely attributed to a significant rebound in food prices, especially fresh vegetables, which reversed a months-long decline. However, this inflationary pressure is set against a backdrop of weak domestic demand, as evidenced by falling factory-gate prices.
The nation's economic policymakers continue to grapple with sluggish consumer spending, a challenge exacerbated by a prolonged property sector debt crisis and the lingering economic impacts of the Covid pandemic. While authorities have implemented subsidy schemes to stimulate activity, their effectiveness has been limited, failing to significantly boost consumer sentiment or halt the underlying slump.
Despite these domestic demand concerns, China's overall economic growth forecast has seen an upward revision from the International Monetary Fund to five percent for the current year. Yet, the persistent deflationary pressures at the producer level, with the producer price index falling by 2.2 percent, highlight ongoing global oversupply issues and trade tensions.



