
Chinese mainland CPI Falls 0.4% in August: Global Impact Explained
Chinese mainland CPI dipped 0.4% in August, signaling easing inflation and potential global ripple effects in markets, business, and travel.
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Chinese mainland CPI dipped 0.4% in August, signaling easing inflation and potential global ripple effects in markets, business, and travel.
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China’s consumer price index (CPI) remained unchanged year on year in July, indicating stable inflation in the Chinese mainland.
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In June, the Chinese mainland saw CPI rise 0.1%—the first year-on-year gain in five months—while PPI fell 3.6%, signaling mixed prospects for consumption and production.
June’s data showed the consumer price index in the Chinese mainland rose 0.1% year on year, highlighting steady prices for consumers and businesses worldwide.
Chinese mainland’s May consumer prices fell 0.1% YoY as factory-gate costs slid further, hinting at softer demand and fresh policy bets.
The Chinese mainland’s CPI dipped 0.1% in May, marking the first monthly dip after modest gains and signaling eased inflation pressure.
In April, the Chinese mainland’s CPI edged up 0.1% MoM while the PPI fell 2.7% YoY, deepening its decline. What it means for markets.
Official data shows China’s CPI edged down 0.1% in March, hinting at steady consumer prices amid evolving economic trends.