日韩午夜精品视频,欧美私密网站,国产一区二区三区四区,国产主播一区二区三区四区

Home / English Column / Business (new) / More News Tools: Save | Print | E-mail | Most Read
High Food Costs Drive up Consumer Prices: NBS
Adjust font size:

Higher cost of food caused China's consumer prices to rise 1.9 percent year-on-year in January, figures from the National Bureau of Statistics indicate.

The consumer price index (CPI), a key inflation measurement, rose 2 percent in urban areas and 1.7 percent in rural areas, the bureau said yesterday.

Food prices, which account for one-third of the index, rose 3.6 percent from a year earlier, the highest gain since March 2005.

Vegetable prices jumped 34.9 percent and grain prices rose for the first time in nine months, increasing 1 percent from a year earlier.

"The CPI situation is within my expectations," said Qi Jingmei, a senior economist with the State Information Centre. The CPI is expected to continue climbing moderately for the rest of this year.

"The country will not face deflation, nor inflation," she said, adding if either occurred, it would hurt the interests of the average person and the national economy as a whole.

Zhuang Jian, a senior economist with the Asian Development Bank's Resident Mission in China, agreed this year's CPI will be moderate, but added it will be higher than that of last year.

"This is mainly because of the government's pending reform on prices of resource-related prices," he said.

The lower prices for products such as oil, electricity and water are not helpful for saving resources.

The administrative control over prices of those products would also distort price mechanisms, he said.

As a result, the National Development and Reform Commission has repeatedly said the government would gradually raise the prices of those products.

Zhang Yongjun, another senior economist with the State Information Centre, said the price adjustment would more or less benefit industrial products accounting for about 50 percent of the CPI, which has suffered price drops for many years.

Fierce market competition and product oversupply is keeping many producers, especially those who make mobile phones and cars, from raising their prices, he said.

"They prefer losing profits rather than the market shares."

Xie Fuzhan, deputy director of the State Council Development Research Centre, said the country's CPI will not exceed 3 percent this year.

It would be easy to keep the CPI below 3 percent by regulating the pace at which government-set utility prices rose, he said.

"If the reforms on prices of oil and public services are quicker, then the price increase will be a bit faster. But it will be controllable," Xie said.

Xie's forecast was in line with the People's Bank of China's prediction. The central bank said on Tuesday that the CPI will pick up this year, averaging about 3 percent against 1.8 percent in 2005, and a seven-year high of 5.3 percent in July 2004.

But Yuan Gangming, a professor at the Tsinghua University, said China will relapse into deflation sometime this year, with a single month's CPI dropping to less than zero percent.

"There is no possibility of an inflation," he said.

(China Daily February 23, 2006)

Tools: Save | Print | E-mail | Most Read

Related Stories
Industrial Producer Prices Up 3.1% in January
Economy Grew 9.9% in 2005: Statistics
Survey Teams Reshuffled for Accurate Statistics
CPI Up by 1.3% in November
CPI Up 1.2% in October
No Drastic Slowdown with Falling CPI
China's Economic Growth Not Deflating
?
SiteMap | About Us | RSS | Newsletter | Feedback
SEARCH THIS SITE
Copyright ? China.org.cn. All Rights Reserved ????E-mail: webmaster@china.org.cn Tel: 86-10-88828000 京ICP證 040089號
主站蜘蛛池模板: 伽师县| 保康县| 南丰县| 泉州市| 临安市| 门源| 洛宁县| 白朗县| 枞阳县| 栾川县| 德庆县| 莆田市| 通许县| 商南县| 海盐县| 松溪县| 富顺县| 松原市| 韶山市| 长丰县| 台江县| 花莲市| 朔州市| 泗阳县| 湘阴县| 宁陵县| 米易县| 上高县| 会理县| 石门县| 连州市| 瑞安市| 盐城市| 陇川县| 彭州市| 多伦县| 开江县| 霍州市| 仙居县| 利辛县| 绥德县|