Filed under: International markets, Conventions and conferences, Competitive strategy, Economic data, Politics

As I discussed previously, China has been going through an impressive growth period over the past few years. The country’s growth rate increased analysts’ concerns about a possible “bubble economy,” and following its decision o tighten monetary controls in 2008, China raised interest rates for a sixth time this year.

China’s move is designed to put a curb on a price surge that has brought inflation to its highest level in a decade in the world’s most populous country. Due to concerns about a debt crisis caused by defaults on bank loans, Beijing had also taken some preventative measures such as imposing lower investment spending on new factories, office buildings and other assets.

According to the central bank, the interest rates for a one-year loan will increase by 0.18 percentage points to 7.47%. Rates on bank deposits will climb by 0.27 percentage points to 4.14%. The bank’s decision is not a surprising one if we take into account that consumer prices rose by 6.9% in November, hitting he highest inflation rate since 1996. Economists blamed an 18.2% growth in politically sensitive food costs for the price surge.

Continue reading China raises interest rates

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

You might also be interested in these

Leave a Reply

Close
E-mail It