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Inflation worsens as China lifts petrol prices
By John Chan
4 July 2008
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In a major shift, the Chinese government raised retail fuel
prices by 16-18 percent on June 19. The move will inevitably stoke
further inflation and follows similar measures by other Asian
countries in recent months. Most analysts were surprised by the
move, as they had expected Beijing to lift the oil pricesa
politically sensitive decisiononly after the Olympic Games
in August.
Rising petrol prices have fuelled a wave of protests and riots
across the globe. Beijing also is well aware that inflation and
deteriorating living standards were a significant factor in large
numbers of workers joining protesting students in the demonstrations
that were finally crushed by the military in Tiananmen Square
in June 1989.
The National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) announced
the decision, declaring: Due to the sharp spike in international
oil prices, some refineries had to be shut down, with queues at
petrol stations and rationing re-emerging in some regions. Appropriate
increases in fuel prices will help raise supply and promote energy
conservation.
Beijing lifted the retail price of petrol by 16.7 percent to
6,980 yuan ($US1,015) a tonne and diesel by 18.1 percent to 6,520
yuan a tonne. The retail price for electricity was raised by an
average of 4.7 percent, except in areas hit by the May 12 earthquake
and in the impoverished Central Asian province of Xinjiang.
Like most developing Asian countries, China maintains domestic
caps on energy prices that are substantially lower than international
benchmarks. As a result, the state-owned petroleum corporations
and refiners such as PetroChina and Sinopec have incurred huge
financial losses, forcing them to scale back or even halt production
and imports. Some smaller refiners have gone bankrupt. China had
to increase fuel prices by 9-10 percent in November for the same
reason.
Jun Ma, a Deutsche Bank economist, commented that energy
shortages had become a bigger threat to stability ahead of the
Olympics than inflation. Shortages of fuel have caused long
queues at petrol stations in many cities throughout China in recent
weeks, causing concern that the transport sector would be badly
disrupted, affecting the whole economy.
The state-controlled petrol price in China is about $0.85 a
litrestill well below $1.08 in the US and $2.33 in the UK.
Low prices have been an important stimulant for the rapidly expanding
auto industry. China is now the worlds second largest market
of automobiles after the US.
Beijing has come under growing international pressure, especially
from Washington, to raise fuel prices. American politicians have
blamed the Chinese demand for oil for causing price rises. Last
week, 16 Democratic senators, including former presidential candidate
Hillary Clinton, sent a letter to the Bush administration demanding
action to force Beijing to end its controls on fuel prices. What
Americans see happening at the pump is driven, in part, by what
is happening in China, they wrote.
The Wall Street Journal warned: With inflation
a growing worry world-wide, the political furore over Chinas
price controls has threatened to supplant the long-standing tussle
over its exchange-rate policies as the nations most contentious
international economic issue.
The crude oil futures in New York did fall by 2 percent following
Chinas announced fuel rises. In the long term, however,
Chinas demand for oil is unlikely to slow amid a rapid growth
of privately-owned vehicles. China is already the worlds
second largest consumer and the International Energy Agency estimates
it will account one third of the global oil demand growth from
2007 to 2030.
Worsening inflation
Analysts warn that the increased energy prices will only worsen
inflation, which eased to 7.7 percent in Maya slight fall
from 8.5 percent in April and a 12-year-high of 8.7 percent in
February.
Immediately after the fuel price hikes, the finance ministry
announced subsidies of 19.8 billion yuan or $2.9 billion for farmers,
taxi drivers and low-income families. Although car ownership is
still relatively low, the numbers are growing. Liu Honghui, one
driver who had queued in Beijing to fill up petrol, told the Financial
Times on June 20: The price increase is high. It doesnt
matter for official cars and the rich, but for ordinary people
the burden will be much heavier.
Kong Fanshan, a taxi driver in Beijing, told Agence France
Press (AFP) that he could not stop driving, even though the hikes
would cut a quarter of his monthly income of 2,000 yuan ($290).
He would lose a deposit of 20,000 yuan if he terminated his contract
with the taxi company. Besides, I only know driving. People
my age cant get another job. Thats the case for most
taxi drivers, he said.
Simon Yang, a cosmetic shop owner, said his small business
would be affected as he made deliveries to clients. Its
certainly not reasonable, especially when other prices are so
high. Everything will rise following the gas price hike,
he said.
For the majority of the population, the increased petrol prices
will translate into higher public transport fares. Credit Suisse
First Boston (CSFB) estimated that an increase of 8 percent in
public transport costs would add 2.3 percent to the inflation
rate in China.
The World Bank sharply revised its inflation forecast for China
in 2008 from 4.8 to 7 percent in a recent quarterly assessment.
While the worst of the food price hikes was over,
it stated, China was facing a second wave of inflationary pressures
from rising prices for industrial commodities. On June 23, for
instance, Anglo-Australian mining giants BHP-Billiton and Rio
Tinto forced Chinese steel companies to pay up to 100 percent
more for iron orea new record high.
The World Bank report rather optimistically predicted a growth
rate of 9.8 percent this year, despite the economic slow down
in the US and Europe and the closure of many low-end factories
in China. It urged the government to increase interest rates and
speed up the appreciation of yuan to combat inflation. Although
Chinas foreign currency reserves have reached $1.76 trillion,
the bank dismissed fears that inflation was being fuelled by an
oversupply of liquidity.
The Chinese governments analysis differs. Under the pressure
from the Bush administration and the US Congress to reduce Chinas
huge trade deficit ($256 billion in 2007), Beijing ended the yuans
peg to the US dollar in 2005 and linked it to a basket of currencies
instead. The yuan has gradually appreciated by less than 10 percent
against the greenback. Speculative capital has flooded into China
in the expectation that the yuan will be further revalued and
that interest rates will rise.
In April, Zhu Baoling, the deputy chief of the State Information
Centres economic forecasting department, estimated that
the amount of speculative capital reached $80 billion in the first
quartercompared to $120 billion for the whole of 2007. A
new estimate by Zhang Ming, a researcher at the Chinese Academy
of Social Sciences, put the cumulative total of hot money
at a staggering $1.75 trillion for the period from 2003 to March
this yearfar higher than the previous estimate of $500-$600
billion.
Zhang warned of the dangers of a sudden withdrawal by speculators.
The possibility of a large-scale evacuation like in the
Asian financial crisis [in 1997-98] is not very big. But if they
think the economic fundamentals will change significantly, the
outflow can be huge, he stated.
The South China Morning Post commented on June 16 that
it was not just foreign investors who were speculating but state
firms and private companies, which falsify export receipts
to move hard currency into the mainland and take advantage of
the rising yuan. At the same time, the rising yuan has hurt
export processing industries in the Pearl River and Yangtze River
deltas that play a central role in creating the 10-20 million
new jobs needed each year.
Tensions between the US and China are rising. During the US-China
Strategic Economic Dialogue last month, US Treasury
Secretary Henry Paulson urged Beijing to abandon its oil price
control and further revalue the yuan. Chinese officials fired
back that Washington was in no position to demand that China act
because of the subprime mortgage mess in the US.
Chinas central bank chief Zhou Xiaochuang pointedly told
reporters: China is of course interested in learning from
the experience of the United States in macroeconomic regulation
and using a market economy, and now we also want to see what lessons
we can draw from the experience of the US after the turbulence
[of the subprime crisis]. The New York Times commented:
Chinese officials seem to be galled by the apparent hypocrisy
of Americans telling them what to do while the American economy
is at best stagnant.
While they have been blaming the falling US dollar and subprime
crisis for rising commodity prices and other global economic problems,
Chinese officials are deeply concerned that economic troubles
in the US and Europetheir largest export marketscan
quickly impact on the Chinese economy and lead to social and political
unrest.
See Also:
Chinese earthquake threatens
wider economic dislocation
[26 May 2008]
Losses mount in Chinese export
industry
[14 April 2008]
Rising costs throw Chinese
manufacturing into crisis
[17 March 2008]
China's National Peoples Congress
haunted by the spectre of social unrest
[12 March 2008]
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