Inflation scissors its way into China manufacturing

Posted By : Telegraf
3 Min Read

[ad_1]

China’s May import data confirm a worrying pattern that we’ve seen anecdotally: Global inflation as reflected in raw materials prices is constraining China’s economy.

Over the past year a scissors opened between the price of iron ore, now more than double its March 2020 level, and the physical volume of iron ore imports. Imports of iron ore to China’s metal-hungry economy have fallen back to 2017 levels while the price China pays for iron ore hovered at the all-time record high.

Global inflation is seeping into China, which means that China will have to raise prices and push the inflation back onto the rest of the world (see “Inflation Dragon China,” June 3). And that isn’t good news for markets. It’s another unintended consequences of the spendthrift lunacy that has possessed Washington.

We haven’t seen this kind of scissors opening between price and import volume before. It isn’t just iron ore. The same pattern applies to copper ore imports.

Chinese demand used to set world raw materials prices. That’s why China’s physical import volume and the price of imports in past years moved in the same direction. In today’s inflationary environment  China is a price taker rather than a price setter. That will create a positive feedback loop where higher raw materials prices force Chinese manufacturers to raise finished goods prices, creating inflation all along the supply chain.

[ad_2]

Source link

Share This Article
Leave a comment