• Wion
  • /World
  • /China inflation rises as coronavirus disrupts supply chains - World News

China inflation rises as coronavirus disrupts supply chains

China inflation rises as coronavirus disrupts supply chains

China economy

Chinaconsumer prices rose at their highest rate in more than eight years, official data showed Monday, withinflationmore than expected on the back of Lunar New Year demand and a deadly virus outbreak.

Beijing had already been battling a slowing domestic economy before the new coronavirus emerged, disrupting businesses, travel and supply chains.

Add WION as a Preferred Source

The consumer price index (CPI), a key gauge of retailinflation, came in at 5.4 per cent last month on-year, up from 4.5 per cent in December, with prices of pork and fresh vegetables pushing up costs.

Food prices spiked 20.6 per cent.

The overall monthly figure exceeded the 4.9 percent forecast by analysts in a Bloomberg survey and is the highest since October 2011.

"The year-on-year increase has been affected not only by Spring Festival-related factors but by the new coronavirus as well," said the National Bureau of Statistics on Monday.

Analysts expectChina's struggle to contain the spread of the virus over the Lunar New Year holiday, which started in late January, to keep prices higher than usual.

"Some food supplies mayspoil before shipping to large cities due to the disruption of transportation and other lockdown measures, especially for fruits, vegetables and livestock," said Lu Ting of Nomura in a research note last Thursday.

"People also tend to hoard food and other supplies in thiskind of situation. The hoarding will most likely push up prices."

The virus has so far claimed more than 900 lives inChina.

The rise in January was the highest since October 2011 when CPIinflationwas 5.5 per cent, .

UOB's head of research Suan Teck Kin told AFP that while prices tend to fall after the Lunar New Year break, "this year, prices may continue to stay high" because of supply chain disruptions.

Over the past year, a spike in pork prices due to African Swine Fever, which ravaged pig herds across the country, had also driven up CPI.

The rise slowed in December as officials released pork reserves to ease the strain on supplies ahead of the holidays, a peak period for consumption.

Last month, pork prices rose 116 per cent from a year ago, up from the 97 per cent rise in December.

The on-month rise for pork was 8.5 per cent.