Nearly 90 percent of urban Chinese believe consumer prices are
too high or moderately high, a survey by the People's Bank of
China, the central bank, has shown.
The survey of urban residents in the first quarter showed that
the index of current price satisfaction dropped 1.8 percent to
minus 15.9 percent, down 6.7 percent from the same period last
year.
The survey also showed people were not optimistic about future
prices. Up to 44.3 percent of respondents predicted that prices
would rise, up 15.6 percent over the first quarter last year.
However, people are positive about future incomes. The
confidence index for future income was 25.1 percent, the highest
level for the first quarter since 1999 when the survey began.
The quarterly survey was conducted among the 20,000 people in 50
Chinese cities in late February.
The Ministry of Commerce earlier estimated the consumer price
index, a major gauge of inflation, was expected to climb 2.5
percent for the whole year of 2007 due to a range of factors,
including higher gasoline prices.
The central bank raised one-year benchmark interest rates by
0.27 percentage points as of March 18 amid concerns about
inflationary trends.
(Xinhua News Agency March 30, 2007)