国产热热热精品,亚洲视频久久】日韩,三级婷婷在线久久,99人妻精品视频,精品九热人人肉肉在线,AV东京热一区二区,91po在线视频观看,久久激情宗合,青青草黄色手机视频

Opinion / Op-Ed Contributors

Putting the lid on inflation

By Zhang Xiaojing (China Daily) Updated: 2011-05-24 07:58

Slower economic growth, better control of liquidity and changes in product structure will help tame rising prices

China's new round of inflation pressures is a combination of a variety of complicated internal and external, short-term and long-term factors.

While China's economy was hit by the global financial crisis, it quickly regained momentum following a series of stimulus packages and its average annual growth rate was 11.2 percent over the 11th Five-Year Plan (2006-2010) period.

Related readings:
Putting the lid on inflation Mild inflation may be long-term trend in China
Putting the lid on inflation Inflation and consumption
Putting the lid on inflation Citizens feel inflation biting hard
Putting the lid on inflation April inflation eases to 5.3 percent

But in order to fend off the harmful effects of the global financial crisis, China has pumped a large amount of monetary supply into the market over the past two years, brewing excessive liquidity in its economy.

Statistics show that the country's total financing volume, an important index to measure market fluidity, amounted to 15.1 trillion yuan ($2.3 trillion) in 2009 and 14.6 trillion yuan in 2010. This huge scale of financing is yet to unfold its full influence on the current level of prices, although the Chinese government has adopted a series of macroeconomic measures to tame inflation.

At the same time, liquidity in the global market has also caused speculative international hot money to flow to China, which, together with its large trade surplus and bulging foreign reserves, has resulted in a large scale of excess liquidity in the domestic market.

Imported inflation has been a leading external factor fuelling China's inflation pressures. China is currently highly dependent on the import of some bulk commodities, especially energy and some primary raw materials, to fuel its fast-growing economy. It is more than 50 percent dependent on imports of oil, bronze and iron ores.

Since last year, prices of some bulk commodities have continued to rise in the international market with the considerable depreciation of the dollar, the resumption of global demand, excessive global liquidity and political turbulence in the Middle East, leading to increased import costs that further push up China's consumer price index (CPI).

The nation's accelerating urbanization and its pricing reforms have also served as middle- and long-term factors affecting China's ever-growing inflation pressures.

As the result of its rapid urbanization, the country's costs of labor, land, energy and other materials have continued to rise in recent years.

Previous Page 1 2 Next Page

New type of urbanization is in the details
...
年辖:市辖区| 新干县| 辰溪县| 临海市| 塔河县| 青铜峡市| 雷州市| 黄山市| 吐鲁番市| 洪湖市| 饶阳县| 石渠县| 盘锦市| 昭通市| 哈尔滨市| 秦安县| 淮南市| 和政县| 浦江县| 洱源县| 无极县| 昌乐县| 大竹县| 科技| 明溪县| 汉源县| 河北区| 汤原县| 安岳县| 察哈| 兴安盟| 六安市| 申扎县| 察哈| 大庆市| 遂平县| 渝中区| 神木县| 托里县| 芮城县| 二连浩特市|