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Chinese Officials and State Media Blame China Inflation on US
Last Updated: Dec 11, 2010
Skyrocketing prices of everyday goods in China threaten the standard of living of the country’s poorest citizens, as well as its nominal middle class. Given the potential dangers faced by the Communist Party as public discontent swells along with inflation, the United States has become scapegoat Number One.
From soybean, ginger, garlic, to cotton and sugar, surging prices have struck one product after another since the beginning of the year. The China Securities Journal described cotton prices in October as “crazy.” Cotton has increased 93 percent compared with the same period last year.
Recently released data by the Ministry of Commerce shows that wholesale prices for 18 kinds of popular vegetables have increased 62.4 percent on last November.
Beijing’s ‘Blame Game’
Chinese officials and opinion leaders have turned to blaming the U.S. for the difficulties.
In a recent forum on foreign trade, Minister of Commerce Chen Mingde warned Chinese companies about the impact of inflation on imports, saying that “the U.S. dollar supply is uncontrolled, and international commodities keep increasing in price,” according to a Nanfang Daily report.
In a widely circulated article in mainland Chinese media, deputy dean of the School of Economics at Fudan University, Sun Lijian, questioned whether China is prepared for the effects of the United States’ “exporting” inflation to the world.
Zhang Jiye, in an article published by the Beijing-backed Global Times, criticized the Federal Reserve’s Quantitative Easing monetary policy as a strategy designed to slow down China’s emergence as world power.
Chinese Premier Wen Jiaobao in recent comments also criticized the U.S for shifting the responsibility for the global economic imbalance onto China, according to a Caihua Net report.
Wu Fan, editor-in-chief of China Affairs, believes the current inflation is due to the extremely loose monetary policy previously adopted by Beijing to stimulate Chinese economic growth; he believes the purpose of current media reports is to shift public attention and resentment from this fact.
He cites official data which shows that, ten years ago, China’s Gross Domestic Product was one and a third trillion U.S. dollars, while the country’s broad money supply (meaning the amount of money in circulation) was about two trillion. This amount nearly equals 670 billion dollars beyond China’s total GDP.
Comparing 2009’s figures in dollars, China’s GDP was about five trillion with a money supply of nine trillion, four trillion dollars of excess money supply over production; in other words, much more money than needed has been in the economy.
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Last Updated: Dec 11, 2010
Skyrocketing prices of everyday goods in China threaten the standard of living of the country’s poorest citizens, as well as its nominal middle class. Given the potential dangers faced by the Communist Party as public discontent swells along with inflation, the United States has become scapegoat Number One.
From soybean, ginger, garlic, to cotton and sugar, surging prices have struck one product after another since the beginning of the year. The China Securities Journal described cotton prices in October as “crazy.” Cotton has increased 93 percent compared with the same period last year.
Recently released data by the Ministry of Commerce shows that wholesale prices for 18 kinds of popular vegetables have increased 62.4 percent on last November.
Beijing’s ‘Blame Game’
Chinese officials and opinion leaders have turned to blaming the U.S. for the difficulties.
In a recent forum on foreign trade, Minister of Commerce Chen Mingde warned Chinese companies about the impact of inflation on imports, saying that “the U.S. dollar supply is uncontrolled, and international commodities keep increasing in price,” according to a Nanfang Daily report.
In a widely circulated article in mainland Chinese media, deputy dean of the School of Economics at Fudan University, Sun Lijian, questioned whether China is prepared for the effects of the United States’ “exporting” inflation to the world.
Zhang Jiye, in an article published by the Beijing-backed Global Times, criticized the Federal Reserve’s Quantitative Easing monetary policy as a strategy designed to slow down China’s emergence as world power.
Chinese Premier Wen Jiaobao in recent comments also criticized the U.S for shifting the responsibility for the global economic imbalance onto China, according to a Caihua Net report.
Wu Fan, editor-in-chief of China Affairs, believes the current inflation is due to the extremely loose monetary policy previously adopted by Beijing to stimulate Chinese economic growth; he believes the purpose of current media reports is to shift public attention and resentment from this fact.
He cites official data which shows that, ten years ago, China’s Gross Domestic Product was one and a third trillion U.S. dollars, while the country’s broad money supply (meaning the amount of money in circulation) was about two trillion. This amount nearly equals 670 billion dollars beyond China’s total GDP.
Comparing 2009’s figures in dollars, China’s GDP was about five trillion with a money supply of nine trillion, four trillion dollars of excess money supply over production; in other words, much more money than needed has been in the economy.
.