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China Inflation RateThe inflation rate in China was 3.30 percent in July of 2010. Inflation rate refers to a general rise in prices measured against a standard level of purchasing power. The most well known measures of Inflation are the CPI which measures consumer prices, and the GDP deflator, which measures inflation in the whole of the domestic economy. This page includes: China Inflation Rate chart, historical data and news.
| Year | Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec |
| 2010 | 1.50 | 2.70 | 2.40 | 2.80 | 3.10 | 2.90 | 3.30 | | | | | |
| 2009 | 1.00 | -1.60 | -1.20 | -1.50 | -1.40 | -1.70 | -1.80 | -1.20 | -0.80 | -0.50 | 0.60 | 1.90 |
| 2008 | 7.10 | 8.70 | 8.30 | 8.50 | 7.70 | 7.10 | 6.30 | 4.90 | 4.60 | 4.00 | 2.40 | 1.20 |
* The table above displays the monthly average.
China's July Inflation Spikes Up
Published:
8/11/2010 10:23:16 AM
By:
TradingEconomics.com, AP
China's inflation spiked up in July amid heavy flooding that disrupted food supplies, adding to pressure on the government to control rising living costs as rapid economic growth slows.
China's inflation spiked up in July amid heavy flooding that disrupted food supplies, adding to pressure on the government to control rising living costs as rapid economic growth slows.
Consumer prices rose 3.3 percent over a year earlier, the National Bureau of Statistics reported. It was the highest level this year and well above the government's official annual target of 3 percent.
The rise was driven by a 6.8 percent jump in food costs amid flooding across farm areas that has disrupted food supplies.
The jump in inflation adds to pressure on communist authorities to ease an increase in the cost of living. Beijing has clamped down on bank lending to cool double-digit increases in housing costs.
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China Economic News
China's July Inflation Spikes Up
Published: 8/11/2010 10:23:16 AM
By: TradingEconomics.com, AP
China's inflation spiked up in July amid heavy flooding that disrupted food supplies, adding to pressure on the government to control rising living costs as rapid economic growth slows.
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China July Trade Surplus Widens
Published: 8/11/2010 10:20:40 AM
By: TradingEconomics.com, WSJ
China recorded its biggest trade surplus in a year and a half for July, government data showed Tuesday, likely adding to the pressure on Beijing to allow faster yuan appreciation.
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China Economy Cools in Second Quarter
Published: 7/15/2010 9:58:48 AM
By: TradingEconomics.com, Reuters
China's economy cooled in the second quarter, a slowdown that is likely to extend over the rest of the year as Beijing steers monetary and fiscal policy back to normal after a record credit surge to counter the global crisis.
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China's Trade Surplus Widens
Published: 7/11/2010 7:35:24 PM
By: TradingEconomics.com, Bloomberg
China’s overseas sales jumped 43.9 percent in June from a year earlier to $137.4 billion and the trade surplus more than doubled to $20 billion, the highest level in eight months.
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China Says It Will Increase Yuan's Flexibility
Published: 6/19/2010 4:57:56 PM
By: TradingEconomics.com, WSJ
China's central bank moved Saturday to head off resurgent international criticism of its currency policies with a pledge to make its tightly controlled exchange rate more flexible, a surprise announcement that was quickly welcomed by the U.S. and others even though the central bank also ruled out a big rise in the yuan.
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China Inflation Rises to a 19-Month High
Published: 6/13/2010 3:29:34 PM
By: TradingEconomics.com, AP
China's inflation rose in May amid signs its rebound from the global slump is slowing, adding to pressure on Beijing to keep growth on track and control politically sensitive prices.
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China’s Exports Rise 48.5% in May
Published: 6/10/2010 10:00:43 AM
By: TradingEconomics.com, Reuters
China's exports jumped in May, reassuring investors about the economy's strength but putting pressure on U.S. President Barack Obama to placate critics who say Beijing is keeping the yuan unfairly undervalued.
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Chinese Economy May be Overheating
Published: 5/11/2010 8:24:49 PM
By: Anna Fedec, contact@tradingeconomics.com
Data released in the last few weeks in China may be indicating that the third largest economy in the world is beyond recovery period and may be close to overheating. Yet, the Chinese government is still far from acknowledging that fact and focusing on slowing down the property prices instead of initiating monetary policy tightening.
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China's Inflation Rate Accelerates
Published: 5/11/2010 10:21:29 AM
By: TradingEconomics.com, MarketWatch
China's inflation rate accelerated in April, as consumer and producer prices beat estimates, while bank lending rose nearly 30% faster than expected.
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China Gets Back to Trade Surplus
Published: 5/10/2010 10:11:14 AM
By: TradingEconomics.com, reuters
China returned to familiar territory by posting a trade surplus in April, but exports only narrowly topped imports, providing limited comfort for policymakers fearful of another round of global economic turmoil.
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More news
Inflation Rate Definition
In mainstream economics, the word “inflation” refers to a general rise in prices
measured against a standard level of purchasing power. Previously the term was used
to refer to an increase in the money supply, which is now referred to as expansionary
monetary policy or monetary inflation. Inflation is measured by comparing two sets
of goods at two points in time, and computing the increase in cost not reflected
by an increase in quality. There are, therefore, many measures of inflation depending
on the specific circumstances.
The most well known are the CPI which measures consumer prices, and the GDP deflator,
which measures inflation in the whole of the domestic economy.The prevailing view
in mainstream economics is that inflation is caused by the interaction of the supply
of money with output and interest rates. Mainstream economist views can be broadly
divided into two camps: the "monetarists" who believe that monetary effects dominate
all others in setting the rate of inflation, and the "Keynesians" who believe that
the interaction of money, interest and output dominate over other effects. Other
theories, such as those of the Austrian school of economics, believe that an inflation
of overall prices is a result from an increase in the supply of money by central
banking authorities.
Related concepts include: deflation, a general falling level of prices; disinflation,
the reduction of the rate of inflation; hyper-inflation, an out-of-control inflationary
spiral; stagflation, a combination of inflation and poor economic growth; and reflation,
which is an attempt to raise prices to counteract deflationary pressures(source: wikipedia).
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