China
December inflation edges up as expected, producer prices
still in deflation
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[January 09, 2016]
By Xiaoyi Shao and Pete Sweeney
BEIJING (Reuters) - China's consumer
inflation barely edged up in December while companies' factory-gate
prices continued to fall, adding to concerns about growing deflation
risks in the world's second-largest economy.
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In line with sluggish activity, China's consumer inflation quickened
slightly to 1.6 percent year-on-year in December, as expected,
compared with 1.5 percent the previous month.
The producer price index was unchanged at minus 5.9 percent in
December, the National Bureau of Statistics said on Saturday,
slightly above forecasts but marking a 46th straight month of
declines and highlighting the deeply entrenched pressures facing
China's manufacturers as the economy cools.
"The inflation profile remains soft and the continuous PPI deflation
suggests that Chinese companies will have to reduce their debt as
further expansion in many industries will only lead to more loss,"
wrote Zhou Hao, economist at Commerzbank in Singapore.
An official survey last week showed China's manufacturing sector
contracted for a fifth straight month in December and factories
continued to shed jobs, dampening hopes that the economy will enter
2016 on steadier footing.
China Beige Book International (CBB) said in its latest private
survey that growth in input prices and sales prices for Chinese
firms slipped to record lows in the fourth quarter.
"For the first time, it looked like firms were encountering
genuinely harmful deflation," the private survey said. That opinion
was echoed by other economists.
The risk of entrenched deflation is a nightmare for China, which
desperately wants to avoid becoming stuck in a trap where falling
prices sap economic vitality.
Deflationary cycles encourage consumers to hold off from buying and
businesses to hold off from investing indefinitely, on expectations
that prices will continue falling.
Such cycles can prove extremely difficult to escape, and Chinese
policy makers have kept a worried eye on the example of Japan, where
a strong currency, distorted banking sector and muddled monetary
policy combined to suppress growth for decades.
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FIGHTING DEFLATION WITH CURRENCIES
Given how stubborn deflationary pressure has proven in China,
regulators appear to be bringing the exchange rate to bear on the
problem. After spending most of 2014 holding the yuan steady while
other currencies dropped against the dollar, Beijing since August
has let its currency fall more than 6 percent against the dollar, to
its weakest level since 2011.
A weaker yuan could help to fight deflation imported via sliding
commodity prices, while providing some support to the struggling
export sector and allowing the central bank to stop drawing down its
foreign exchange reserves to hold the yuan firm against the dollar.
That would also indirectly support efforts to lower onshore
borrowing rates for debt-laden Chinese firms, although it would make
the cost of servicing their offshore debt far more expensive. In
response, it appears that Chinese corporations with
dollar-denominated debt are hurrying to pay it down before the yuan
weakens further.
A rising chorus of policy advisers and industrial constituencies is
lobbying for an even deeper devaluation to the currency, by as much
as 10 to 15 percent, despite the risk of a potential currency war of
competing devaluations in Asia.
China's consumer price index is likely to climb 1.7 percent in 2016
from last year while its producer price index is forecast to fall
1.8 percent year-on-year, the central bank said in a working paper
last month.
China is set to release fourth-quarter and full-year GDP data on
Jan. 19.
(Editing by Clarence Fernandez and Edmund Klamann)
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