Customers shop for smartphones at a Suning electronics retail store in Beijing on January 15, 2025. - AFP
BEIJING: China’s consumer inflation accelerated for the first time since August, in what’s likely a blip caused by a burst of household spending around the Lunar New Year holiday even as deflationary pressures persist.
The consumer price index (CPI) rose 0.5 per cent in January from a year earlier, the National Bureau of Statistics said Sunday (Feb 9), compared with a 0.1 per cent gain in the previous month. The median forecast of economists surveyed by Bloomberg was a 0.4 per cent increase.
A temporary spending boom during the eight-day break is briefly obscuring the extent of the deflationary challenge facing the world’s second-biggest economy.
China’s factory deflation extended into a 28th month with a 2.3 per cent drop, flat with the index’s contraction in December.
Analysts at Nomura Holdings Inc., including Sonal Varma and Si Ying Toh, estimate that China’s CPI could have been distorted by around 0.4 percentage point last month, as some prices gained when consumers ramped up purchases ahead of the festival that ran from Jan. 28 to Feb. 4 this year.
The health of the consumer economy is increasingly in focus for China after it exchanged the first blows in a trade war with the US. An improvement in domestic demand is urgently needed to help offset the effects of higher tariffs on exports imposed this month by the Trump administration.
Top officials led by President Xi Jinping have already pivoted to plans for bigger government spending and more interest-rate cuts. With household wealth under strain from a yearslong property slump, they elevated boosting consumption to the top priority for economic efforts this year, only the second time that’s happened in at least a decade.
The persistence of deflationary pressures in China is in stark contrast to other major economies. The worry for Beijing is that an entrenched cycle of price decreases would hold back household spending for longer and damage corporate revenues so much that it stifles investment and leads to further salary cuts and layoffs. - Bloomberg