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China's consumer inflation pushes higher by AFP Staff Writers Beijing (AFP) Aug 10, 2022 China's consumer inflation rose in July to a two-year high, official data showed Wednesday, with a surge in pork prices pushing up the cost of food. Compared with other countries, consumer costs in the world's second-biggest economy have not skyrocketed, largely spared the impact of a global surge in food prices after the Russian invasion of Ukraine. China's consumer price index (CPI), a key gauge of retail inflation, grew less than expected at 2.7 percent from a year ago in July, National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) data showed. CPI rose slightly on-year "due to an increase in prices of pork, fresh vegetables and other food, as well as seasonal factors", NBS senior statistician Dong Lijuan said in a statement. Food prices were up 6.3 percent on-year, with pork spiking 20.2 percent in July, she added. Prices of the staple meat rose in part because of the reluctance of some farmers to sell -- ostensibly to maximize profits -- and a pick-up in consumer demand, according to the NBS. While fuel prices were also higher than the same period last year, their growth rates have declined, Dong said. "The headline rate has been lifted by fuel inflation and, more recently, a rebound in food inflation," said Julian Evans-Pritchard, senior China economist at Capital Economics in a recent report. He added that a weak labour market "may further sap price pressures", and that he expects inflation to fall later this year. The producer price index (PPI) -- measuring the cost of goods at the factory gate -- rose 4.2 percent in July, down from 6.1 percent in June, official data showed Wednesday. This was lower than the expectation in a Bloomberg poll of analysts. The NBS said this was influenced by a drop in international commodity prices such as crude oil and non-ferrous metals. "The priority given to keeping factories open while restricting many consumer activities has meant that, domestically, lockdowns have been disinflationary," Evans-Pritchard added in his earlier report. "Unlike elsewhere, stimulus has targeted investment rather than household spending."
Asian markets mostly up as focus turns to inflation data Hong Kong (AFP) Aug 9, 2022 Asian equities mostly rose Tuesday but investors moved cautiously ahead of US inflation data later in the week, after a jobs report suggested the Federal Reserve would likely need to continue its sharp interest rate hikes to tame runaway prices. A rally across global markets from June lows appeared to have hit the buffers after Friday's forecast-busting employment reading showed the world's top economy remained resilient but meant more monetary tightening was on the cards. There had been a hope ... read more
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