Shanghai Daily

CPI jumps 2.8% over rising pork prices in August

- Huang Yixuan

CHINA’S consumer inflation continued to rise in August amid higher pork prices, while factory-gate inflation declined.

The Consumer Price Index, the main gauge of inflation, jumped 2.8 percent year on year last month, the same pace as July, the National Bureau of Statistics said yesterday.

The higher headline CPI figure was partly led by surging pork prices, which registered a jump of 46.7 percent in August from a year earlier, 19.7 percentage points faster than the previous month.

Food prices soared 10 percent year on year, 0.9 percentage points higher than the previous month, leading to a 1.93-points rise in the overall CPI, according to the bureau.

In addition to pork, fresh fruit prices rose 24 percent, 15.1 percentage points slower than July, while prices for beef, mutton and chicken all posted increases between 11.6 percent and 12.5 percent year on year.

These five together contribute­d 1.66 percent to the CPI growth.

“As a result of the spike in pork prices, there has been a spillover effect on other food items, leading to broad-based food inflation. Chinese residents have sought other food items such as beef or mutton as protein substitute­s, leading to a jump in their prices in recent months as well,” said Xing Zhaopeng, China markets economist, and Raymond Yeung, chief China economist of the Australia and New Zealand Banking Group.

Fresh vegetable prices, however, retreated 0.8 percent; the first decline after rising for 18 consecutiv­e months.

Non-food prices, meanwhile, grew 1.1 percent, 0.2 percentage points slower than July, contributi­ng 0.91 percentage points to headline CPI growth.

Prices in the education, culture and entertainm­ent sector, health care and housing rose by 2.1 percent, 2.3 percent and 1 percent, respective­ly.

On a month-on-month basis, the headline CPI edged up by 0.7 percent, up 0.3 percentage points from the pace in July.

Food prices surged by 3.2 percent in general, compared with the 0.9 percent rise in the previous month.

The supply of pork continued to get tighter, with prices soaring 23.1 percent from a month earlier, 15.3 percentage points higher than the rise in July, leading to a 0.62 percent increase in the overall CPI figure, according to Shen Yun, senior statistici­an at the NBS.

Due to the upcoming MidAutumn Festival and the effect of substituti­on in consumptio­n, prices for eggs, beef, mutton, chicken and duck saw increases between 2 percent and 5.9 percent month on month.

Vegetable prices posted a 2.8 percent month-on-month rise on account of a recent typhoon and the hot weather, Shen said, while fruit prices dropped by 10.1 percent as a large number of fresh fruits were on the market.

The Producer Price Index, which measures the cost of goods at the factory gate, fell 0.8 percent year on year in August, compared with a 0.3 percent drop in July, and “the negative trend will likely extend before the year end,” according to the ANZ Group.

PPI inflation in the oil and natural gas extraction industries fell by 9.1 percent year on year, further extending the decline by 0.8 percentage points from the previous month. PPI inflation also fell further in fuel processing and ferrous metal processing industries.

On month-on-month terms, PPI retreated by 0.1 percent.

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