China hints extra measures needed to tackle inflation
CHINA vowed yesterday to prevent high inflation from upending the economy, reinforcing expectations for more increases in interest rates and bank reserve requirements.
Premier Wen Jiabao said tackling inflation was the government's top policy priority while central bank Governor Zhou Xiaochuan said the authority needed to make maintaining price stability "more prominent and important."
Inflation rose to a three-year high of 6.4 percent in June, data showed on Saturday. The comments mark a fresh attempt to show the inflation fight is far from over and the government is determined to bring prices back under control, analysts said.
"If they signal any comfort with inflation, and inflation is as high as it is now, they could create an environment in which people would panic, and they can have a real problem on their hands," said Tim Condon, head of Asia research at ING in Singapore.
Wen declared curbing price pressures as the top priority in an address in March, when inflation was 1 percentage point lower than June's level.
He said then that inflation could threaten social stability in the world's second-biggest economy.
"We must treat stabilizing overall price levels as the top priority of our macro-economic controls and keep the direction of macro-economic adjustments unchanged," Wen said in remarks reported yesterday by the central government's Internet portal (www.gov.cn).
He said the government would try to stabilize prices of pork, a staple meat for Chinese and the most closely watched item in controlling inflation, by boosting the supply of hogs. Pork prices in June surged 65 percent from a year earlier, official figures show.
China would maintain a "prudent policy" to bring prices back under control while trying to avoid causing big swings in economic growth, Zhou said.
"The most prominent problem in macro-economic operations is the relatively big inflationary pressure and still strong inflationary expectations," Zhou wrote in the latest edition of China Finance magazine, published by the People's Bank of China.
"We must make it more prominent and important to maintain basic stability of the overall price level, and pay attention to price stability in a wider scope," Zhou said.
China's inflation has largely been driven by food costs, which rose 14.4 percent in the year through June.
June's headline inflation was slightly above the 6.3 percent forecast in a Reuters poll and revived expectations of more interest rate rises in the next few months.
The data, combined with weak jobs growth in the United States and lower-than-expected imports in China in June, rattled Asian stock and commodities markets.
Zhou also said the central bank would work to "avoid big fluctuations" in the economic growth, indicating some concerns over risks to the economy. "We should implement prudent monetary policy in a pro-active and safe way to handle the relationship between maintaining stable, relatively fast growth, adjusting economic structures and managing inflationary expectations," he said.
Premier Wen Jiabao said tackling inflation was the government's top policy priority while central bank Governor Zhou Xiaochuan said the authority needed to make maintaining price stability "more prominent and important."
Inflation rose to a three-year high of 6.4 percent in June, data showed on Saturday. The comments mark a fresh attempt to show the inflation fight is far from over and the government is determined to bring prices back under control, analysts said.
"If they signal any comfort with inflation, and inflation is as high as it is now, they could create an environment in which people would panic, and they can have a real problem on their hands," said Tim Condon, head of Asia research at ING in Singapore.
Wen declared curbing price pressures as the top priority in an address in March, when inflation was 1 percentage point lower than June's level.
He said then that inflation could threaten social stability in the world's second-biggest economy.
"We must treat stabilizing overall price levels as the top priority of our macro-economic controls and keep the direction of macro-economic adjustments unchanged," Wen said in remarks reported yesterday by the central government's Internet portal (www.gov.cn).
He said the government would try to stabilize prices of pork, a staple meat for Chinese and the most closely watched item in controlling inflation, by boosting the supply of hogs. Pork prices in June surged 65 percent from a year earlier, official figures show.
China would maintain a "prudent policy" to bring prices back under control while trying to avoid causing big swings in economic growth, Zhou said.
"The most prominent problem in macro-economic operations is the relatively big inflationary pressure and still strong inflationary expectations," Zhou wrote in the latest edition of China Finance magazine, published by the People's Bank of China.
"We must make it more prominent and important to maintain basic stability of the overall price level, and pay attention to price stability in a wider scope," Zhou said.
China's inflation has largely been driven by food costs, which rose 14.4 percent in the year through June.
June's headline inflation was slightly above the 6.3 percent forecast in a Reuters poll and revived expectations of more interest rate rises in the next few months.
The data, combined with weak jobs growth in the United States and lower-than-expected imports in China in June, rattled Asian stock and commodities markets.
Zhou also said the central bank would work to "avoid big fluctuations" in the economic growth, indicating some concerns over risks to the economy. "We should implement prudent monetary policy in a pro-active and safe way to handle the relationship between maintaining stable, relatively fast growth, adjusting economic structures and managing inflationary expectations," he said.
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