Last Updated :
03 September 2010 at 15:50 IST
China to strictly curb food price rise
BEIJING (Commodity Online) : In an attempt to curb rising food prices across the nation, China on Friday asked local governments to take appropriate actions including to punish merchants who profiteer.
According to a Chinese cabinet decision, Mayors were told to make sure local markets have a week's supply of vegetables and to cool a surge in politically sensitive food prices.
Banks were told to lend to producers to increase output amid shortages blamed on summer flooding and drought in some areas.
Get the most comprehensive analysis and insight into India pulses market. Subscribe to Commodity Online Info Service
"Making sure of vegetable supplies and price stability is an important task for now and in the future," the Cabinet statement said. "Local governments should manage inflation expectations well and realize the importance and urgency of this."
China's food price inflation spiked to 6.8 percent in July over a year earlier, pushing overall inflation to 3.3 percent, its highest level this year, according to government figures.
Elsewhere, a jump in food prices triggered deadly riots in Mozambique this week and the poor in Asia, the Middle East and Africa are under strain after global prices jumped 6 percent in the past two months alone.
No unrest has been reported in China but food prices are politically sensitive in an economy where the poor majority spend up to half their incomes to eat.
Beijing has repeatedly emphasized the importance of ensuring adequate food supplies this year and has threatened to punish merchants who profiteer.
China also suffered a spike in food costs earlier when vegetable prices jumped 14.9 percent in April and fruit prices soared 16.4 percent.
Beijing has repeatedly said it is confident of meeting its 3 percent inflation target for 2010. But private sector analysts expect overall August inflation to rise above 3.5 percent, driven partly by food costs.
NCDEX RAPEMUSTARDSEEDJUN12 20 June 2012
contract was trading at
Rs 0 . What's your view on it?
After reading this article, people also read: