Deflation risk in China grows as signs of economic weakness mount

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Consumers in China are delaying purchases while businesses slash wages.

Consumers in China are delaying purchases while businesses slash wages.

PHOTO: AFP

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China’s core inflation cooled to the weakest in more than three years, adding to signs that policymakers are struggling to get households to spend and further putting the annual growth target under pressure.

The consumer price index (CPI) increased 0.6 per cent in August from a year earlier, less than a median forecast of 0.7 per cent growth in a Bloomberg survey of economists. Excluding volatile food and energy costs, core CPI rose 0.3 per cent, the least since March 2021, indicating lingering weakness in overall demand.

“The deflationary pressure in China is getting more entrenched,” said Ms Michelle Lam, Greater China economist at Societe Generale. “This may well fuel a downward price-wage spiral which will require more radical policy response.”

Factory gate prices remained stuck in deflation, as they have been since late 2022, with the producer price index sliding 1.8 per cent from a year earlier, more than economists’ forecast of a 1.5 per cent drop.

The modest rise in consumer prices was driven by higher costs of food because of bad weather, Mr Dong Lijuan, chief statistician at the National Bureau of Statistics, said in a statement accompanying the release. Fresh vegetables, in particular, saw prices rise by 18.1 per cent due to heavy rainfall. 

China’s economy is fighting the longest streak of falling consumer prices since 1999, according to a measure of economy-wide prices. Weak consumption and investment demand have led to intense price wars in sectors including electric vehicles and solar. This is denting China’s chances of hitting its growth goal of about 5 per cent, as consumers delay purchases and businesses slash wages.

“The fiscal policy stance needs to be more proactive in order to prevent the deflationary expectations from becoming entrenched,” said Mr Zhiwei Zhang, chief economist at Pinpoint Asset Management.

Former central bank governor Yi Gang has called on policymakers to focus on fighting deflationary pressures “right now”. That marked a rare acknowledgment by a prominent Chinese figure of the nation’s battle with falling prices.

“We have the problem of weak domestic demand, especially on the consumption and investment side, so that needs proactive fiscal policy and accommodative monetary policy,” Mr Yi told the Bund Summit in Shanghai on Sept 6.

Mr Yi said he hoped the GDP deflator, a broad measure of prices, would turn positive in the next few quarters. But Goldman Sachs’ chief China economist Hui Shan said that would be “challenging” because of poor sentiment and a lack of confidence about the future.

“Organic private demand seems to be weakening more than we would like to see, but at the same time policymakers are getting uncomfortable,” she said in a Bloomberg TV interview.

The People’s Bank of China still has space to cut the amount of cash banks must keep in reserve, according to Mr Zou Lan, the central bank’s monetary policy department head who noted last week that the average reserve requirement ratio (RRR) for financial institutions is at about 7 per cent.

Analysts have been forecasting further rate cuts and a reduction to the RRR rate, with September seen as a potential window. BLOOMBERG

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