China's CPI rises 4.5% in Jan

Updated: 2012-02-09 09:56

(Xinhua)

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BEIJING - China's consumer price index (CPI), a main gauge of inflation, rose 4.5 percent year-on-year in January, the National Bureau of Statistics said Thursday.

The growth rate was the highest in three months, accelerating from 4.1 percent in December and 4.2 percent in November. On a monthly basis, the country's CPI increased 1.5 percent in January, the NBS said.

Although the unexpected rebound severed a months-long decline from a 37-month high of 6.5 percent in July, it will not change the CPI's downward trend for the whole year, analysts said.

The CPI increase, which was mainly boosted by food price surges in January amid the traditional Chinese Lunar New Year holiday, will see a remarkable pull-back in February, said Lian Ping, chief economist at the Bank of Communications.

Li Huiyong, chief analyst of Shenyin & Wanguo Securities, expected the country's CPI annual increase to ease to 3 to 3.5 percent in February.

Food prices, which account for nearly one third of the basket of goods in the nation's CPI calculation, climbed 10.5 percent in January from one year earlier and contributed to 3.29 percentage points in January's CPI rise.

China's CPI rises 4.5% in Jan

Prices of pork, China's staple meat, soared 25 percent year-on-year in January, while grain prices jumped 6.1 percent from one year earlier.

On a monthly basis, the country's CPI increased 1.5 percent in January, the NBS said.

Despite the CPI rebound, the country's producer price index (PPI) only increased 0.7 percent in January year-on-year, down from 1.7 percent in December and was the lowest since December 2009. PPI is a main gauge of inflation at the wholesale level.

However, even if January's rebound was an aberration, the fact that it was well above the market expectations may caution policy makers to hold off policy loosening, said Peng Wensheng, chief economist of the China International Capital Corporation, the country's largest investment bank.

"There is less possibility that the central bank will cut the reserve requirement ratio in February," Peng said.

For more than a year, China has been squeezing its banking system in efforts to rein in high inflation. However, the country's central bank in December cut the amount of cash that lenders have to set aside as reserves for the first time in three years..

"Inflation is a decreasing risk for the economy and policy is likely to emphasize growth in the medium term," Alaistair Chan, an economist at Moody's Analytics said in a statement.

The country's policy makers vowed to maintain the prudent monetary policy and proactive fiscal policy in 2012, but fine-tune these policies as conditions change.

China's economic growth had slowed over the length of last year. Its GDP growth decreased to 8.9 percent in the fourth quarter of 2011 from 9.7 percent in the first quarter.

The country's GDP growth will further dip to 8.5 percent in the first quarter of this year, the State Information Center, a government think tank, projected in a statement released Thursday.

On Monday, the International Monetary Fund cut its forecast for China's GDP growth this year to 8.25 percent from the 9 percent projected in September 2011. It said China's projected growth could be cut by nearly half if the eurozone, its biggest trade partner, suffers a sharp downturn due to the debt problems.

China's PPI up 0.7% in Jan

China's Producer Price Index (PPI), a main gauge of inflation at the wholesale level, rose 0.7 percent in January year-on-year, the lowest since December 2009, the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) said Thursday.

The reading eased further from December's 1.7-percent growth, as most of the country's factories suspended production during the Chinese Lunar New Year holiday.

On a month-on-month basis, China's January PPI fell 0.1 percent from December, the NBS said in a statement on its website.

Producer purchase prices grew 2 percent year-on-year in January and were down 0.3 percent from a month ago, said the NBS.

China's CPI rises 4.5% in Jan

 

Economist Dong Xianan said the January PPI growth was in line with expectations and the growth would continue to decelerate in February.

"With the further easing of inflationary pressures, the growth in the country's producer prices may pick up in the second half of this year if demand improves," he said.  

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