Chinese mainland CPI Up 0.7% YoY in November
The Chinese mainland’s CPI rose 0.7% year on year in November 2025, signalling controlled inflation amid steady consumer demand and resilient supply chains.
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The Chinese mainland’s CPI rose 0.7% year on year in November 2025, signalling controlled inflation amid steady consumer demand and resilient supply chains.
Chinese mainland’s consumer prices returned to growth in October with CPI up 0.2% year-on-year, core inflation accelerating, and a narrower PPI decline.
The Chinese mainland’s CPI rose 0.2% in October, signaling modest inflation growth. We unpack what this means for consumers, businesses, and global markets.
The Chinese mainland’s consumer price index dipped 0.3% year-on-year in September, signaling a subtle shift in inflation and its impact on consumers, businesses and global travellers.
Chinese mainland CPI dipped 0.4% in August, signaling easing inflation and potential global ripple effects in markets, business, and travel.
April’s US tariffs sparked modest CPI upticks: 0.2% to 0.3% monthly. Hidden costs may be building as import duties bite. Young global citizens, entrepreneurs & travelers: what to watch.
China’s consumer price index (CPI) remained unchanged year on year in July, indicating stable inflation in the Chinese mainland.
Gary Hufbauer of PIIE slams US tariffs as “completely ridiculous,” forecasting tariff-driven inflation to show in the CPI by October or November, tightening budgets for everyday Americans.
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.