China's Deflation Concerns Heighten Economic Recovery Challenges
Send us your feedback to audioarticles@vaarta.com
China’s official consumer price index, which targets inflation, has slipped by 0.3% over the past 12 months, raising fears about its economic recovery. This slump forces China to try to stimulate demand in the world’s second-biggest economy. Weakened import and export data leave questions hanging over its post-pandemic rebound. Challenges continue beyond economic difficulties as ballooning local government debt, problems in the housing market, and rising youth unemployment add to the complex picture.
Falling prices hinder China's efforts to reduce its debt, slowing growth and adding to economic challenges, analysts say. The country needs a combination of increased government spending, lower taxes, and looser monetary policies for solutions. Unlike many developed countries that have seen surging consumer spending after pandemic restrictions eased, Chinese prices remained relatively stable as weak demand kept demand low. The country was close to deflation, marked by flat consumer prices and declining factory gate prices.
In short, the deflationary trend is reason for concern over the global economic impact on China, so potentially it could influence prices in the rest of the region, including the UK. Though it may help tame rising costs elsewhere, The surplus of discounted Chinese goods on international markets can adversely affect other countries’ manufacturers. This, in turn, can stifle business investment and employment opportunities.
Since China is facing challenges such as Evergrande’s property market crisis together with a sluggish post-pandemic recovery, rebuilding the confidence of investors and consumers becomes pivotal to stimulating growth. Eswar Prasad, a trade policy and economics professor, said one of the steps for the government is to instill confidence in the private sector to encourage consumer spending and business investment, perhaps through stimulus measures such as tax cuts.
Follow us on Google News and stay updated with the latest!
Comments
- logoutLogout