Amid economic downturn and stock market crisis, China's producer prices continue to fall in June, a sign of prolonged weakness of demand, data from the National Bureau of Statistics said today.
The producer price index, a measure of costs for goods at the factory gate, fell 4.8% year on year in June, widening from the 4.6% drop seen a month earlier. The reading also marked the 40th straight month of decline.
"This showed industrial demand is worsening, and China continues to face prominent deflationary risks," noted Qu Hongbin, chief China economist at HSBC.
Also Read
Month on month, producer prices in June went down 0.4%.
Output prices of production materials fell 6.2% in June, contributing 4.7 percentage points of the PPI drop during the month, while those of consumer goods edged down 0.2% during the period, state-run Xinhua news agency reported.
The data came along with the release of the consumer price inflation index, which edged up to 1.4% in June, slightly above the market forecast of 1.3% and 1.2% rise in May.
Weighed down by a housing market downturn, weak domestic and external demand and overcapacity, China's economy grew at its lowest rate in six years in the first quarter, expanding 7%.
The GDP data for the second quarter is due on July 15, which analysts predict will slip below 7% as the effects of China's pro-growth policies have yet to spread.