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Chinese inflation rises to highest rate in 11 years Keith Bradsher HONG KONG: Consumer prices rose 7.1 percent in China last month, the largest increase in more than a decade. The steep increase in prices, announced Tuesday by the Chinese government's National Bureau of Statistics, is the latest warning sign that China has been transformed from a moderating influence on global prices to a source of inflationary pressure. Chinese exporters are trying to pass on their rising costs to overseas customers, which could contribute to inflation in the United States and Europe. "Our company is faced with rising labor costs and raw material costs," said Michelle Yin, a sales manager for the Shanghai Yongqiu Compressor Company, which makes walk-in coolers and freezers and exports to the United States and Europe. "Depending on the margin we get from individual customers, we have been able to pass on all or part of the cost increase. For new customers, we typically have to set prices more aggressively to get their business." Food prices led the increase again in January, climbing 18.2 percent. Economists had expected a sharp increase, partly because the harvest last year was poor for many crops and partly because snowstorms began to hurt food production and distribution in late January.
(Article continues below) But inflationary pressures now seem to be accelerating and spreading more broadly across the Chinese economy. Consumer prices jumped 1.2 percent just from December to January. And nonfood prices were up 1.5 percent from a year earlier in January. The consumer price inflation figures released Tuesday came after a separate release of statistics Monday showing that Chinese producer prices, measured when goods leave a factory, rose 6.1 percent in January from a year earlier. Chinese economists attributed the increase mainly to higher prices for fuel and other raw materials. Price increases are also spreading to services, where prices were up 2.6 percent, a sign that labor costs are also starting to climb.
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