China Logs First Producer Inflation in Over 3 Years
By Reuters | 09 Apr, 2026
China's factory-gate prices rose in March due to rising import costs from the Mideast crisis.
China's factory-gate prices in March turned positive for the first time in more than three years, official data showed on Friday, pointing to rising import cost pressures linked to the Middle East crisis.
The producer price index (PPI) increased 0.5% from a year earlier, according to data from the National Bureau of Statistics, ending a 41-month streak of declines. The reading beat an estimated 0.4% gain in a Reuters poll.
The consumer price index (CPI) ticked up 1% year-on-year, slower than a 1.3% rise in February. Economists polled by Reuters had expected prices to climb 1.2%.
On a monthly basis, CPI fell 0.7%, below expectations for a 0.2% decline and compared with a 1% rise in February.
(Reporting by Qiaoyi Li and Ryan Woo; Editing by Christian Schmollinger)
Recent Articles
- Anterior to the Heart
- Meta to Capture Employee Mouse Movements, Keystrokes for AI Training
- Judge Blocks Trump Policies Stymying Solar, Wind Projects
- Thousands of Companies File Refund Claims As Tariff Refund System Opens
- Volkswagen to Cut Another 1 Million from Annual Capacity
- China's Changan Aims to Join World's top-10 Carmakers by 2030
- Great Wall Motor to Launch 10 New Cars for European Comeback
- Taiwan Exports Orders Surge to Fastest Pace in Over 16 Years
- Many Americans Question Trump’s Temperament
- COVID Shots, Newer Vaccines in Limbo After Court Dinged Kennedy’s Advisory Panel
