China’s consumer prices fell the fastest in three years in November while factory-gate deflation deepened, indicating rising deflationary pressures as weak domestic demand casts doubt over the economic recovery.
The consumer price index (CPI) dropped 0.5% from a year earlier compared with October.
That was deeper than the median forecasts in a Reuters poll of 0.1% yearly and month-on-month declines. The year-on-year CPI decline was the steepest since November 2020.
The numbers add to recent mixed trade data and manufacturing surveys that have kept alive calls for further policy support to shore up growth.
Xu Tianchen, senior economist at the Economist Intelligence Unit, said the data would be alarming for policymakers and cited three main factors: falling global energy prices, the fading of the winter travel boom and a chronic supply glut.