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China prices rise as cost of food spikes
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Oct 16, 2018

A spike in the price of fruit and vegetables pushed up China's inflation rate in September, official figures showed Tuesday.

For the fourth straight month, the consumer price index (CPI) -- an important barometer of retail inflation -- rose, hitting its highest level since February, at 2.5 percent, the National Bureau of Statistics said.

Extreme typhoon weather lashed southern China last month, bringing strong winds and heavy rain, and badly affecting agricultural production, it added.

The world's biggest pork producer is also scrambling to contain an outbreak of African swine fever that has spread through pig farms, with pork prices rising significantly from August.

Adding to the strain on consumers, the cost of diesel and gas jumped more than 20 percent on last year.

Oil is priced in US dollars, a currency that has risen against the yuan in recent months, making fuel imports pricier.

The producer price index -- which is used to measure the performance of the industrial sector -- decelerated to a 3.6 percent on-year rise in September.

That was down from 4.1 percent in August but above the 3.5 percent forecast in a Bloomberg News survey.

While prices rose, the costs of raw materials went down, the NBS said.

"Policymakers are likely to look through the latest pick-up in consumer price inflation and focus instead on evidence of cooling economic momentum, including slower core inflation and weaker factory gate price pressures," said Julian Evans-Pritchard, senior China economist at Capital Economics.

The rise in consumer inflation is "unlikely to prevent (the central bank) from loosening monetary policy further in the coming months in a bid to shore up economic growth," he said in a note.


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FARM NEWS
World must slash meat consumption to save climate: study
Paris (AFP) Oct 10, 2018
The world must drastically reduce its meat consumption in order to avoid devastating climate change, scientists said Wednesday in the most thorough study so far on how what we eat affects the environment. As humanity grapples with tough choices to offset a rapidly heating planet, the research suggests that the Western world would need to slash its meat intake by 90 percent to avoid crippling Earth's ability to sustain an anticipated 10 billion people by 2050. Food production - which produces d ... read more

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