La Nouvelle Tribune

In China, Inflationa­ry Pressures Remain Subdued—For Now

- By Jonathan Cheng The Wall Street Journal. Featured article licensed from our partner The Wall Street Journal.

Producer prices rose 8.8% in February, easing from recent high of 13.5%, though conflict in Ukraine could increase inflation risks

Rising energy prices in the run-up to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine added to Chinese inflation in February, an early sign of the pressures building in the global economy as the war sends commodity prices soaring.

Producer-price inflation slowed in China in February, to 8.8% from a year earlier, versus a 9.1% rate in January and a peak of 13.5% in October. Consumer prices rose at the same 0.9% annual pace as a month earlier.

At the same time, prices charged by companies at the factory gate rose on a month-tomonth basis for the first time since October, while the monthly pace of consumerpr­ice inflation also picked up, data from China’s National Bureau of Statistics showed Wednesday. Producer prices rose 0.5% in February compared with January, while consumer prices rose 0.6%.

Behind the uptick were rising prices for energy and metals, a reflection of investor unease ahead of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine last month. Since Russia invaded in the final days of February, energy and commodity prices have exploded as the U.S., the European Union and others responded with crippling sanctions that threaten to choke off Russian supplies of oil, gas, metals and fertilizer to the rest of the world.

The full effects of Russia’s invasion on inflation have yet to be felt, in China and elsewhere. Policy makers and economists expect surging prices for gasoline, food and other necessitie­s will hurt consumer spending and weigh heavily on growth, especially in Europe. That inflation will also complicate the task of central banks that are seeking to balance intensifyi­ng price pressures with incomplete pandemic recoveries.

Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell told lawmakers last week that he would propose a quarter-percentage­point rate increase at this month’s policy meeting, effectivel­y ending speculatio­n about a larger rate rise in the U.S. as the war upends the outlook for growth and worsens the picture for inflation.

China, the world’s second-largest economy, is in a different position. Domestic inflationa­ry pressures are subdued because of pandemic-related restrictio­ns on movement, which have curbed consumer demand. Chinese consumers are also less exposed than their Western counterpar­ts to swings in global energy and commodity prices. Economists at Goldman Sachs expect consumer price inflation in China to average around 2.5% in 2022, higher than its current rate but considerab­ly below expectatio­ns for inflation in the U.S., where consumer prices in January grew at an annual rate of 7.5%, a 40-year high. On Saturday, Chinese officials left their annual consumer inflation target unchanged for this year at 3%, reflecting expectatio­ns of only a benign increase in prices.

While central banks such as the Fed are expected to tighten policy this year to contain inflation, China’s central bank is expected to stick with its easy money stance to boost growth and meet Beijing’s 5.5% gross domestic product target against a darkening global backdrop and domestic real estate downturn. The growth target, set in recent days by Chinese Premier Li Keqiang, was a more ambitious goal than many economists had expected and will likely require robust stimulus measures to achieve it.

Julian Evans-Pritchard, senior China economist at Capital Economics, said the Ukraine war’s economic impact would be felt in China through weaker corporate profits and trade figures, rather than in the intense inflationa­ry squeeze now facing the West.

“China isn’t immune, but there will be a very different impact than elsewhere,” he said. “There’s nothing to stop them responding to this shock by easing further.”

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