Industry, inflation may have cooled in April (bloomberg) Updated: 2005-05-16 09:13 China's industrial production
in April probably rose at the slowest pace this year and inflation likely cooled
after the government restricted investment to ease shortages of power, transport
and raw materials.
Production rose 14.6 percent from a year earlier and consumer prices
increased 2.4 percent, according to the median estimates in Bloomberg News
surveys of economists. The gains would be the smallest since December, allowing
for distortions caused by changes in the timing of the Lunar New Year holiday.
The figures will be released this week in Beijing.
Slowing gains in output and consumer prices may deter the government from
taking further steps to cool growth in Asia's second-largest economy. Premier
Wen Jiabao last year ordered banks to restrict lending to industries including
real estate, autos and steel and rules governing property loans were further
tightened last month.
``The government will maintain vigilance, especially for any potential
inflationary problems, and while there are still specific targets such as real
estate, they will still wait and see'' before taking further action, said Tai
Hui, an economist at Standard Chartered Bank in Hong Kong.
Car sales, which rose 15 percent to 2.33 million units in 2004, fell 3.2
percent in the first quarter, prompting manufacturers to scale back production.
Output in the first quarter fell 1.8 percent to 825,000 units according to the
China Association of Automobile Manufacturers.
Autos, Steel
Sliding auto production and government efforts to cool property development
are helping damp demand for steel. Production of steel products in the first
quarter was flat from the previous three months and year-on-year growth
moderated to 21 percent from 34 percent in the year-earlier period.
The Shanghai Post reported on May 12 that consumer prices rose 1.8 percent in
April, which would follow a 2.7 percent increase in March and be the smallest
gain since October 2003.
``Core inflation, excluding food, is reasonably stable, but the fall is a
temporary phenomenon,'' said Huang Yiping, an economist at Citigroup Inc. in
Hong Kong. ``Pressure on inflation is growing from higher raw-material prices,
labor costs and energy prices.''
Producer prices in April rose 5.8 percent, the fastest pace in three months,
the statistics bureau said yesterday. Crude-oil costs jumped 37 percent and coal
prices increased 26 percent, it said.
Fuel Prices
To reflect rising fuel costs, the government is allowing prices of gasoline,
diesel and electricity to be raised. Retail prices of gasoline were increased by
about 8 percent in March, and diesel prices this month were lifted by more than
4 percent. Electricity prices were raised by an average 0.0252 yuan (0.3 cent)
per kilowatt-hour from May 1.
So far, rising energy prices have had little impact on consumer spending in
the world's most-populous nation. Retail sales probably gained 13.5 percent in
April, according to the Bloomberg survey. Using combined figures for January and
February to allow for the Lunar New Year, that would be the 13th straight month
that sales have climbed more than an eighth.
``People are spending more because their incomes are growing and the
government has been increasing farmers' incomes by cutting agriculture taxes,''
said Dariusz Kowalczyk, senior investment strategist at CFC Securities in Hong
Kong. ``This is supporting consumer spending and helping the government to
rebalance growth away from excessive investment and toward consumption.''
Per capita disposable incomes in urban areas, home to a third of the nation's
1.3 billion people, rose 11 percent from a year earlier to 2,938 yuan in the
first quarter, and those in the countryside increased 16 percent to 967 yuan,
the statistics bureau said on April 20.
The following table shows economists' forecasts for the year- on-year
percentage increases in industrial production, retail sales and consumer prices
in April from a year earlier. The National Bureau of Statistics may report the
data next week in Beijing.
|