A片在线看网站日韩天天操|免费A片视频青青A√|网站a片在线观看|国产精品无码专区aⅴ电影男组长|四虎影视激情色久悠悠综合网|瑟瑟亚洲综合在线播放AV区|婷婷九月福利导航|免费看的一几片A片|黄色A片电影男女午夜大片|亚洲国产三级电影

Register
簡體中文
Info Center
Home > Info Center > CCSE Review
Return
China: CPI to rise at moderate rate, still under control, official said
Author:
admin
PublishDate:
2007-08-16 14:43:00
Hit:
285
BEIJING, Aug. 15 (Xinhua) -- A Chinese national research center said on Wednesday that the consumer price index (CPI) is still within government control although it will "keep rising at a moderate rate for a relatively long time".

Recent price hikes signaled moderate inflation only, in which the prices rise steadily at a relatively low rate. Inflation was not high nor out of control, said the State Information Center (SIC).

SIC research into the CPI changes in the past two decades suggested that a growth rate of five percent was the threshold for moderate inflation in China, well above the accumulative 3.5 percent CPI growth in the first half.

Although the threshold was exceeded by the 5.6-percent growth in July, inflationary pressure was not severe compared with similar accelerated price hikes in 2004, in which the CPI rose by at least five percent for four straight months from June to September.

If accelerated CPI growth occurred, the government could still effectively rein the prices through policies such as the suspension of government-controlled price rises, said the SIC.

The SIC attributed the pressure for further prices hikes to future growth in food and housing prices.

Food price increases would likely last sometime because of tight domestic supply market and soaring international food prices, which rose 20 percent in the first four months, SIC quoted from a World Bank report in May.

Housing prices, accounting for 13.2 percent of the CPI, had increased by four to five percent since 2005 because of soaring demand.

Large salary increases for government workers last year, together with the booming stock and real estate markets, boosted domestic demand, which would drive up prices overall, the SIC said.

The SIC forecast the CPI growth at around four percent in 2007, higher than the three-percent goal set at the beginning of the year.

Source: Xinhua News
Alternate Text