Saturday, December 11, 2010

(CNN) Chinese inflation spikes on food costs

Chinese inflation spikes on food costs
By Catherine Tymkiw, producerDecember 10, 2010: 10:48 PM ET

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Higher food prices continue to be the main driver of inflation in China, raising the likelihood of an imminent interest rate hike as the country tries to reel in its red-hot economy.

Consumer prices rose 5.1% for the 12 months ended Nov. 30, according to government data released early Saturday in China. That comes on the heels of a 4.4% jump in October. And once again, a surge in food costs is the culprit. Food prices rose 11.7% during the period. Excluding food prices, China's CPI edged up only 1.9%.

Compare that with the United States, where the CPI has been sluggish for months. In October, the U.S. CPI increased a modest 1.2%, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Excluding the volatility of food prices, the U.S. CPI rose 0.6%.

The U.S. trade balance narrowed to a more-than-expected $38.7 billion, bringing the U.S. trade deficit to a 9-month low.

China tries to stave off inflation
But China is a different story.

China said its trade surplus narrowed to $22.9 billion in November -- a 16% decrease over October's $27.2 billion surplus. China's exports jumped 34.9%, while the country's imports rose 37.7%.

Fears of runaway inflation have led to rising speculation that the People's Bank of China will move to raise interest rates as early as this weekend.


0:00 /6:50The myth of China's building boom
Just one week ago, China said it would be more "prudent" about its monetary policy in 2011. And on Friday, the People's Bank of China raised the reserve requirement ratio for its banks by a half-percentage point for the third time in a month.

Month by month: CPI rose 1.1% in November, on a monthly basis. The increase was largely due to higher food prices. Meanwhile, core CPI was up a more modest 0.6%.

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