首页 » 未分类 » Falling prices in China might just be bad for everyone

Falling prices in China might just be bad for everyone

 
文章目录

While so many countries have spent the last year grappling with stubborn inflation, China is facing the opposite problem.

Indeed, in July prices actually fell by 0.3% compared to a year before.

While the term 'deflation' shouldn't be officially coined until prices have fallen for three months in a row, there are now real fears that is where things are headed, and it is nonetheless a big moment for the world's second largest economy.

You might think that falling prices might not be such a bad thing, indeed in the immediacy it can sometimes feel like a brief relief for households.

But deflation is actually a phenomenon that worries governments and central bankers even more than its opposite number, inflation.

Left to spiral, falling prices erode the profits of businesses, depress confidence, discourage investment and can ultimately lead to mass job losses and high unemployment.

If it were to take hold in a more long-term way it could wreak untold pain not just in China but around the world too.

More on Covid

  • Falling prices in China might just be bad for everyone

COVID anniversary: Day of reflection across UK to mark five years since start of pandemic

  • Falling prices in China might just be bad for everyone
  • COVID scars remain in the tight-knit communities of Welsh Valleys

  • Falling prices in China might just be bad for everyone
  • Five years on from COVID, one survivor reflects on having to fight for his life

    Related Topics:

    • COVID
    • China
    • UK Economy