The Borneo Post

China factory gate inflation slows as commodity prices drop

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BEIJING: Factory price inflation eased in April, data showed yesterday, fuelling concerns about a growth slowdown in the world’s number two economy and denting hopes for a pick-up a global reflation.

The reading follows a series of weak figures out of Beijing in recent months, including on trade and manufactur­ing, as the government tries to turn the country’s main growth engine from state investment and exports to domestic consumptio­n.

The producer price index (PPI) rose 6.4 per cent on-year, a sharp drop from the previous month’s 7.6 per cent and February’s 7.8 per cent - marking the first consecutiv­e drop since July.

It was also slightly short of forecasts for 6.7 per cent in a Bloomberg News survey.

“The sharp rebound in producer prices over the past year has now run out of steam,” Chang Liu, a China economist at Capital Economics, wrote in a recent report.

“We expect ( producer price index) inflation to ease over the rest of 2017.” Global commodity prices - particular­ly for metals and oil - sank last week to five-month lows as global demand falls off, led by the slowdown in key market China.

China’s economy, a vital engine of global growth, expanded 6.7 per cent last year, the slowest rate in a quarter of a century.

But a slight improvemen­t in the past three months of 2016 provided signs of stabilisat­ion.

The uptick in Chinese price growth in recent months had also fuelled hopes that it can export inflation around the world.

For years the global economy has been mired in tepid inflation or deflation which, if persistent, tends to be bad for industrial prospects and economic growth because customers delay purchases in hopes of getting cheaper deals in the future, starving companies of business and funds. — AFP

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