The country has ample grain reserves to meet consumer demand and
help stabilize prices during the coming festive period, the State
Grain Administration said yesterday amid high inflation and an
expected increase in holiday spending.
"China has stored enough grain to fully meet market demand,"
Zeng Liying, the administration's deputy director, said on the
government's website
www.gov.cn.
Her statement came amid expectations that the coming 50-day
festival season, spanning Christmas, New Year and the Spring
Festival, might spur the consumption of grain, food, meat and
cooking oil, and in turn fuel inflation rises.
The government has recently introduced a slew of measures aimed
at cooling food prices and inflation.
This week, it scrapped the 13 percent tax rebates on wheat,
corn, soybean and flour products, while exports of corn and wheat
were halted in the second half of the year to ensure domestic
demand was met.
This month, the central government ordered 36 major cities,
including Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou, to each maintain a
minimum 10-day reserve of food and cooking oil supplies, to help
ensure market stability amid rising food prices.
The authorities also started selling State reserves of corn and
wheat earlier this year to meet domestic demand and control prices.
It sold 500,000 tons of corn from its reserve this week, following
a similar move last week.
"All the measures are being taken to fight rising consumer
prices," Zeng said.
China's inflation rate reached 6.9 percent last month, the
highest in 11 years. Food prices, which make up a third of the
consumer basket, rose 18.2 percent.
Xiao Meiling, a 50-year-old housewife from Deyang in Sichuan
Province, said: "The festive period has already fueled a spike in
food and cooking oil prices."
She said the price of a 5 kg bottle of cooking oil has risen by
about 8 yuan ($1.08) in the past 10 days.
"This is because more and more shoppers have thronged to the
supermarkets, as the holidays approach," Xiao said.
Zeng reiterated that the domestic supply of agricultural
products remains steady.
"The country's grain harvest is expected to exceed 500 million
tons this year, rising for the fourth consecutive year," she
said.
She said the country's ratio of grain reserves to consumption is
also much higher than international standards, but did not
elaborate.
"China has reached a balance between grain supply and demand,"
Zeng said.
"This year's harvest plus the rich reserves will fully meet the
demands of the domestic market."
(China Daily December 21, 2007)