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China walks fine line to keep growth with low inflation

(Xinhua)
Updated: 2008-01-25 20:14

Many factors are driving up  inflation in China, some of them being felt throughout the world and the government is turning to various methods to deal with the situation.   

Some of these tools, like monetary tightening, are widely used. Others, like price caps and "moral suasion" in the form of  warnings to industries, are viewed with skepticism in some  economic quarters.

Indeed, they're not a common policy in post-reform China. Price caps have been imposed only twice in the past 12 years: in 1996,  when the consumer price index (CPI) surged to a record high of 8.3 percent and in 2003, when China was affected by the SARS (severe  acute respiratory syndrome) epidemic.

Analysts both within and outside China say that efforts to keep prices down, including by less conventional methods such as price  caps on a small number of items, could be useful temporarily, but  what's most important is what comes next.    

Renewed efforts this week to control fertilizer prices were an  example of central government preemptive actions that stop short of an order -- so-called moral suasion.

On Tuesday, the top economic planning agency, the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC), gathered executives of 30-strong nitrogenous fertilizer makers that control more than half of the country's  supply.    

At a meeting in Beijing, the NDRC cautioned the manufacturers against disguised price hikes or price rigging and said there  would be penalties for such actions.

The agency also said it might "overhaul" prices during the spring planting season two months from now. Prices of agricultural inputs have already risen sharply and could limit farm production, which would mean higher downstream prices later on in the year.    

Other industries are under tighter scrutiny. In mid-January, 12 major producers and retailers of daily consumer goods such as  edible oil, dairy products and instant noodles were told they would have to seek official approval for prices hikes of certain  percentages within certain periods.    

Analysts said that such 'administrative interventions' and a number of outright price caps could give the country a cushion  against inflation, which has only become an issue of public concern in roughly the past year.

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