China's CPI up 0.7% in November
- China's Consumer Price Index increased by 0.7 percent year on year in November, marking the highest growth since March 2024 according to the National Bureau of Statistics .
- The rise in CPI was driven by increased food prices, shifting from declines in previous months, according to NBS.
- The Producer Price Index decreased by 2.2 percent year on year in November due to a high comparison base from the same period last year, as noted by Dong Lijuan, chief statistician at the NBS.
- On a monthly basis, CPI decreased by 0.1 percent due to seasonal declines in service prices following autumn travel, as stated by NBS.
9 Articles
9 Articles
China’s Consumer Prices Rebounded Without Easing Deflation Fears
China’s consumer-price growth accelerated to the fastest in over a year as food costs rose sharply higher, an improvement that’s failing to allay fears about the depth of deflation across large swathes of the economy.
Indicator confirms the expectations of analysts, after two consecutive months of decline. The risk of deflation is two years old for the Chinese economy.
China’s CPI Picks Up, PPI Stabilizes on Demand Recovery
Beijing - China's consumer inflation accelerated at its fastest pace in 21 months in November, while factory-gate prices showed signs of stabilizing, underscoring that a recovery in domestic demand is gaining traction amid government support measures. Customers select vegetables at a market in Wuhan, central China's Hubei Province, Dec. 10, 2025. China's consumer price index (CPI), a main gauge of inflation, grew at a faster pace in November, d…
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