Deflationary pressures in China appear to be easing
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Chinese consumer price inflation (CPI) has missed expectations, rising by 2.0% in the year to May.
The figure was below expectations for an increase of 2.3%, a level that would have been unchanged from April.
It was the lowest annual growth rate recorded since January this year.
Over the month CPI fell by 0.5%, again below estimates for a smaller decline of 0.2%.
Continuing the theme of prior month, all of the strength was concentrated in food inflation, offsetting persistent weakness in non-food inflation.
Food inflation rose by 5.9% from a year earlier while non-food inflation rose by a far smaller 1.1%.
Business Insider Australia
Although CPI undershot market estimates, there was better news on producer price inflation with the annual decline narrowing to 2.8%.
This was well ahead of the 3.3% contraction expected and 3.4% decline seen in the 12 months to April.
It was also the smallest year-on-year drop since November 2014, suggesting that upstream deflationary pressures are moderating.
Read the original article on Business Insider Australia. Copyright 2016. Follow Business Insider Australia on Twitter.
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