China’s producer and consumer inflation both accelerated in April
The Facts
- China’s producer price index increased 2.8% year over year in April, according to official data.
- The April producer inflation reading was the highest in 45 months.
- China’s consumer price index rose 1.2% year over year in April, up from 1.0% in March.
- Producer prices had returned to positive growth in March after a 41-month declining streak, and April was the second straight month of year-over-year gains.
- Multiple reports attributed April’s inflation pickup in part to higher global energy prices, with petroleum-related sectors among the drivers of producer-price gains.
- Official and state-media reports said some commodity-linked sectors posted especially large price increases in April, including non-ferrous metals and oil-and-gas-related industries.
- The rise in prices adds cost pressure for manufacturers at a time when several reports say China’s domestic demand remains weak.
- Analysts cited in several reports said the inflation pickup may not lead to major policy changes, because the rise appears driven by costs rather than a broad demand recovery.
How left and right are reading this
- Both agree
- April’s inflation pickup looks driven by energy and commodity input costs rather than stronger domestic demand, leaving manufacturers under pressure while offering little evidence of a broad recovery or a clear reason for major policy changes.
- They split on
- Less a disagreement than a question of emphasis: the burden those cost increases place on manufacturers in a weak-demand economy, versus the policy implication that a cost-led inflation rise is a weak case for major intervention.
Context
What drove the increase in China’s inflation measures in April?
Reports and official commentary linked the rise mainly to higher global energy and raw-material prices, especially in petroleum-related sectors, with stronger travel demand also cited as a factor for consumer prices Yahoo! Finance,english.news.cn,China Daily Asia.
Why does higher producer inflation matter?
Producer inflation reflects prices at the factory gate, so a faster increase can mean manufacturers are paying more for inputs. Several reports said that in China’s case, those higher costs are arriving while domestic demand is still weak, which can squeeze company margins rather than signal a broad-based recovery english.news.cn,Business Times,caixinglobal.com.
What remains unclear after the April data?
It is still uncertain whether the rise in prices marks a durable improvement in China’s economy or mainly reflects external cost pressures. Multiple reports said analysts do not yet see the data as enough to prompt major policy shifts, because inflation is still viewed as below the official target range and demand conditions remain soft RTE.ie,News.az,NST Online.
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