HomeNewsOpinionDeflation is the last thing China’s recovery needs

Deflation is the last thing China’s recovery needs

Price increases elsewhere are cooling, though still a way from their comfort zones. For policymakers in Beijing, the challenge is of a different nature: escaping the specter of deflation. For all the reasonably positive short-term news on growth in China, declining prices point to anemic levels of demand

November 10, 2023 / 10:13 IST
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For policymakers in Beijing, the challenge is of a different nature: escaping the specter of deflation. (Source: Bloomberg)

A senior Chinese central banker declared this week that he had few worries.  President Xi Jinping's modest target of 5 percent growth, reckoned to be in jeopardy not long ago, is now in sight. That success comes with big caveats, not least of which is inflation. The problem is there isn't any.

Consumer prices, languishing for a while, took a new step down in October. They dropped 0.2 percent from a year earlier, according to government figures released on Thursday, while factory-gate prices slipped 2.6 percent. That's a tad worse than economists expected, but the real disappointment is that it suggests a meaningful recovery is some time away, no matter how good gross domestic product might look in the very short term.  Former People's Bank of China Governor Yi Gang once described inflation of 2 percent as a central banker's dream. By that yardstick, China falls short.

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This is miles away from the situation that the Federal Reserve and most other central banks confront. Price increases elsewhere are cooling, though still a way from their comfort zones. For policymakers in Beijing, the challenge is of a different nature: escaping the specter of deflation. For all the reasonably positive short-term news on growth in China, declining prices point to anemic levels of demand.

When CPI dipped below zero over the summer, the news triggered an outbreak of anxiety: “What-the-heck-has-happened-to-China?” Is the world going to hell as a result? It was as though people hadn't grasped that China was in a long-term, if gradual, slowdown well before the pandemic. This wasn't a disaster, and still doesn't have to be. But prices that lie flat, or go into reverse, remind us that all is not well.