|      Diners    looking for some beef hotpot on a chilly evening in Beijing    pay more per pound than their counterparts in Boston, a discrepancy that    shows the challenges China faces in reviving    growth as inflation pressures make an untimely    return. China's consumer price index rose 3.2 percent in February    from a year earlier, a 10-month high, official data released on Saturday    showed. The pick up in inflation from just 2 percent in January was driven by    a 6 percent increase in food costs. Prices that rise too much    could jeopardize a government preference to allow economic    growth to stabilize after it eased in 2012 to its weakest full-year    pace in over a decade. Growth only started to pick up in the fourth quarter    after a seven-quarter-long slide. But if policymakers move    too quickly to dampen inflation, they could equally jeopardize the very    growth they are trying to nurture. It is a dilemma China's incoming leaders    Xi Jinping and Li Keqiang may have hoped they would not have to face so early    in the economic recovery. "This year I think    there are three priorities - to stabilize economic growth, which is not too    big of a problem, and to stabilize the prices of goods, where already it    looks like there could be some pressure," said Zhao Xijun, deputy    director of the Finance and Securities Institute at Renmin University. Zhao    says the third priority is to reduce the risk from hidden debt, such as    off-book wealth management products. There are already    indications China's central bank is shifting its policy focus to inflation    from growth. China needs to control inflation as a priority, the central bank    said in its fourth-quarter policy report in February, shifting from a pledge    in its previous report to support the economy above other needs. POLICY DILEMMA Pressures on China's meat prices highlight not only the challenge of    bringing inflation under control but also in shifting the economy more    towards consumer-led growth, Beijing's stated goal after decades of    export-led expansion. Food    prices    typically rise ahead of the Lunar New Year holiday -- which occurred in    February this year. But since the holiday ended, meat prices, especially for    beef and lamb, have stayed elevated. "Accelerating food    prices mean less growth in spending on other goods and services in the    economy," Carl Weinberg, the China-watching chief economist at New York    consultancy High Frequency Economics, wrote in a client note. Retail beef prices in    Beijing city markets are higher compared with supermarkets outside Boston.    Pork, China's staple meat, is about 50 cents/kg below the U.S. price, a    Reuters comparison of standard retail prices show. That's a direct hit on    the spending power of Chinese, whose average income is about a tenth that of    Americans. Loss of farmland and farm    labor to urbanization - China's cities are swelling as they absorb hundreds    of millions of people - and grazing restrictions due to land degradation add    to food production costs. "The more the    economy develops, the harder it is to raise calves," said Wang Jimin,    who tracks China's cattle trends at the Chinese Academy of Agricultural    Science's Rural Economic Development Institute. "In the short term,    I don't see meat prices falling unless there are a lot of imports." After an international    outbreak of mad cow disease a decade ago, China will only allow beef imports    from Australia, New Zealand and Uruguay, so options to tame prices with    imports appear limited. INFLATION EXPECTATIONS China's beef production    has decreased every year since 2008, although it could rise by less than 1    percent this year, U.S. Department of Agriculture estimates suggest. "Cattle take at    least a year to raise, not like chickens which need a few months at most.    Poultry producers can respond to the market much faster," Yang Shaohui,    a poultry vendor in Beijing, said. His chicken was selling for about a third    of the price of the beef at a nearby stall. High feed costs will also    help elevate pork prices for the near future. Rising pork prices are expected    to drive broader inflation gains by the third quarter. "It's a question of    fundamentals, not monthly CPI fluctuations," said Shi Tao, livestock    analyst at eFeedlink in Shanghai. He expects a reduction in pork supplies    this year because some pig breeders dropped out of the business after losing    money last summer. Rising food prices    represent a sensitive area for China's Communist Party leadership given that    social tension has often accompanied past price hikes. They can fuel inflation    expectations that lead to a broader rise in inflation and the risk that the    central bank will tweak monetary policy to keep a lid on the price pressures. But policymakers should    resist the temptation for pre-emptive action, said Ting Lu, chief China    economist at Bank of America/Merrill Lynch in Hong Kong. "Though policymakers    should be wary of inflation later this year with an economic growth recovery,    it's too early to call for significant monetary tightening at present    yet," he wrote in a note to clients.  |    
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