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China on brink of deflation as prices plunge

F-22Raptor

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China is teetering on the brink of deflation amid mounting concerns about the health of the world’s second largest economy.

Consumer price inflation (CPI) fell to zero in the year to June after a sharp fall in pork prices. The official figure was the weakest reading since February 2021 and below economists’ estimates of a 0.2pc annual rise in CPI.

Producer prices also fell by 5.4pc in June, marking the ninth straight monthly decline and the steepest fall since the end of 2015.

China has struggled to break out of an economic malaise caused by draconian zero-Covid policiesthat were only scrapped at the end of last year.

Heightening tensions between Beijing and Washington have also weighed as Western companies increasingly shift investment away from China.

Youth unemployment in the country stands at 20.8pc as record numbers of graduates struggle to find jobs.

Duncan Wrigley, chief China economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics, said: “Insipid consumer inflation is an indication of the soggy consumer spending recovery, especially for goods, as well as excess production capacity.”

Several of China’s internet giants reported disappointing sales figures at a major shopping event earlier this month.

Economists expect the People’s Bank of China to respond to the country’s weakening economy with cuts to interest rates.

Analysts at Barclays said in a client note: “We think the more challenging deflation environment and sharp slowdown in growth momentum support our view that the PBOC has entered a rate-cutting cycle.”

Some economists believe Beijing will have to supplement rate cuts with tax reductions or increased spending to boost activity.

However, Mr Wrigley said Beijing was unlikely to be forthcoming with a massive fiscal stimulus.

He said: “So far the public information points towards a targeted, limited stimulus, which will largely be funnelled into support for industry, technology upgrades and private firms, rather than a significant consumer handout.”

Looming deflation in China stands in sharp contrast to continued bouts of inflation seen elsewhere in the world.

Britain’s inflation rate stood at 8.7pc in May, forcing the Bank of England into its most aggressive round of rate rises in decades.

 
Deflationary economy is a feedback loop, when there is little incentive to spend money into the economy, as all items are getting cheaper over time, leading to even more outflow of circulating money from economy to savings accounts.
 
Deflationary economy is a feedback loop, when there is little incentive to spend money into the economy, as all items are getting cheaper over time, leading to even more outflow of circulating money from economy to savings accounts.

2+ decades of deflation in Japan and they still can’t figure it out.
 
Look like this western media has found a new sky is falling down, that never seem to run out, forever one after another, continuosly for at least the last 2 decades.
 
2+ decades of deflation in Japan and they still can’t figure it out.

Theres nothing to figure out. Zero or negative population growth will almost always lead to deflationary cycle. People getting older and not spending on cars, wearables, homes etc etc and barely any kids to do the same. Immigration can reverse it but it will bring its own set of challenges which Japanese people are not prepared to accept, any hope of that happening is ruined by the current shitshow in france.
 
B-but... muh trade surplus!
Do you think a stimulus package is imminent ? I’m not sure I understand why the Chinese Government is reluctant?
 
Inflation is the easiest thing to do in the world, just print more money.
 
I m happy with no inflation over the record high inflation in India and the west.
Deflation is also a terrible thing. It kills the incentive to innovate. The best thing for China is speed up BRI. By moving some of the manufacturing out of the country and connecting them to China’s supply chains, China would be building up countries so they can buy products made by the excess manufacturing capacity of China.

This capture of market share on the lower end will help subsidies continued innovations for China to keep moving up the quality ladder and capturing markets on the higher end, such as in airliners.

One big step in this direction would be building on a BOT basis the Khubjerab railway (with the $50 Billion price tag a solid investment in a secure logistic supply route via a vis the malacca dilemma), connecting Xinjiang with Pakistan and building out Gwadar to be the hub of Chinese activity in Western Asia. It could be the home base for a Chinese airline flying C-919 to the region as well as the CR-929 to locations around the world. This would make it more likely these countries would also buy the C-919.

Global population is growing in South Asia and Africa and positioning itself right in the middle of the growth will allow China to build up markets for its products. These counties could supply China will food stuffs at reasonable prices as their base export profits but also be integrated into the Chinese supply chain to make it in their interest to partner with China in many endeavors.
 
Deflation is also a terrible thing. It kills the incentive to innovate. The best thing for China is speed up BRI. By moving some of the manufacturing out of the country and connecting them to China’s supply chains, China would be building up countries so they can buy products made by the excess manufacturing capacity of China.

This capture of market share on the lower end will help subsidies continued innovations for China to keep moving up the quality ladder and capturing markets on the higher end, such as in airliners.

One big step in this direction would be building on a BOT basis the Khubjerab railway (with the $50 Billion price tag a solid investment in a secure logistic supply route via a vis the malacca dilemma), connecting Xinjiang with Pakistan and building out Gwadar to be the hub of Chinese activity in Western Asia. It could be the home base for a Chinese airline flying C-919 to the region as well as the CR-929 to locations around the world. This would make it more likely these countries would also buy the C-919.

Global population is growing in South Asia and Africa and positioning itself right in the middle of the growth will allow China to build up markets for its products. These counties could supply China will food stuffs at reasonable prices as their base export profits but also be integrated into the Chinese supply chain to make it in their interest to partner with China in many endeavors.
Inflation is the easiest thing to do in the world, just print more money.
 
Do you think a stimulus package is imminent ? I’m not sure I understand why the Chinese Government is reluctant?
You mean printing money and handing it out to the nation like the US did during the epidemic? What the U.S. did led to hyperinflation. We don't want inflation.
 

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