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POLITICAL ECONOMY
China inflation accelerates to 6.4%
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) July 9, 2011

China said Saturday its politically sensitive inflation rate accelerated in June to the highest level in three years, as the government struggles to rein in soaring food costs.

The country's consumer price index rose 6.4 percent in June, the National Bureau of Statistics said in a statement, the highest level since June 2008 when the inflation rate reached 7.1 percent.

The June reading -- higher than the 5.5 percent in May and well above the government's annual target of four percent -- is likely to fuel concern among policymakers anxious about inflation's potential to trigger social unrest.

China has been struggling to tame inflation despite restricting the amount of money banks can lend on numerous occasions and hiking interest rates five times since October -- most recently on Wednesday.

Food prices in June were up 14.4 percent year-on-year, while the price of pork, China's preferred choice of meat, was up 57.1 percent during the period, the bureau said.

Higher food prices are likely to hurt low-level income earners the hardest, as foodstuffs account for more than one-third of the monthly spending of the average Chinese consumer, according to the statistics bureau.

"The higher-than-expected CPI inflation in June could be market positive because it increases the chance for CPI inflation to peak in June," Lu Ting, a Hong Kong-based China economist for Bank of America-Merrill Lynch, said in an email.

"We expect CPI inflation to fall steadily after June to around 4.0-4.5 percent at year-end and then will stay there for a couple of years."

Economist Mark Williams at Capital Economics told Dow Jones Newswires ahead of the data release that "although we are still expecting inflation to come down, the confidence with which we hold that view is probably lower than it was a few weeks ago."

"We don't have to panic about the June CPI figure," Xinhua news agency quoted Zhang Liqun, a macroeconomic analyst with the State Council Development Research Center, China's top government think-tank, as saying.

"A CPI growth above six percent does not mean the inflation situation is worsening in China," he said, adding that inflationary pressures built up in recent months were easing.

China's producer price index (PPI) for June, a measure of inflation at the wholesale level, was up 7.1 percent year-on-year, the bureau said, up from 6.8 percent in May.

But measures taken by the government in recent months to slow economic growth and contain inflation appeared to be working, Ken Peng, Beijing-based economist for BNP-Paribas told AFP.

"Because of the growth slowdown we are more confident that inflation in the second half will also wane," Peng said.

"I think we shall see a rebound (in economic growth) by the fourth quarter."

Gross domestic product in the world's second-largest economy expanded 9.7 percent on year in the first three months of 2011, easing from the 9.8 percent growth rate posted in the final quarter of 2010.

The National Bureau of Statistics is scheduled to release second half growth data on Wednesday next week, while the nation's customs authority will release trade numbers Sunday.

Premier Wen Jiabao reportedly admitted last month that it would be difficult to keep inflation within the government's target for 2011, but voiced confidence in containing price rises to within five percent for the year.

Wen further reiterated that fighting rising prices would remain his government's top priority

Some analysts are concerned Beijing might go too far in tightening monetary policy and trigger a sharp slowdown in the world's second largest economy -- which could have dire consequences for the world.

Growth in China's manufacturing activity almost stalled in June and year-on-year auto sales have fallen for two straight months.




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College Park, Md. (UPI) Jul 8, 2011
The U.S. economy added only 18,000 jobs in June after posting a lackluster 25,000 gain in May. Jobs creation remains moribund and inadequate to appreciably dent unemployment because the economic recovery is simply not gaining steam. These weak jobs data indicate the economic recovery remains in low gear and policies other than big deficits and printing money are needed to get Americans ... read more


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