Wokers unload bags of clothes from a truck in Shanghai AFP/Johannes EISELE |
China's consumer price inflation rose more than expected in August, official data showed Monday, after Beijing's first wave of tariffs on US goods came into force, with prices of eggs, pork and vegetables rising.
The consumer price index (CPI), an important barometer of retail inflation, rose 2.3 percent on-year, from 2.1 percent in July, marking the largest increase since February, according to data from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS).
The jump exceeded economist forecasts of 2.1 percent but still comes in well below Beijing's targeted ceiling of three percent.
The price rise comes as experts forecast China's tariffs on US soybean imports, a crucial component of livestock feed, could result in higher prices at the table for the world's most populous country.
The world's biggest pork producer is also scrambling to contain an outbreak of African swine fever that has spread through hog farms.
Pork prices rose 6.5 percent from July, eggs 12 percent and vegetables nine percent, while the prices of cereals and cooking oil remained stable.
The producer price index decelerated to 4.1 percent on-year in August, according to NBS data, compared with 4.6 percent in July and above the four percent forecast in a Bloomberg News survey.
Prices were lifted by higher raw material input costs, according to NBS data.
US President Donald Trump has pledged more tariffs on Chinese goods are in the pipeline -- with duties on $200 billion to be rolled out soon while another wave is under consideration, which would bring almost all imports from China under higher border taxes.
In response, Beijing has taxed American soybeans and cut other imports from the US.
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