China's newly-unveiled inflation control target, although matching last year's figure as the highest growth in a decade, is still pragmatic and reasonable, economists say.
Premier Wen Jiabao told a parliamentary session on Wednesday the country will strive to keep this year's consumer price index (CPI) increase at around 4.8 percent.
Acknowledging the difficulty in curbing price increases, Wen said an upward pressure on prices would remain great this year because factors driving prices up were still at work.
China maintained a steady annual CPI rise, a major inflation gauge, averaging 2.1 percent between 2003 and 2006. Last year, the index was fed by rising food and housing costs to reach a decade-high of 4.8 percent, well over the original 3 percent target.
The price rises have raised concerns they may affect global inflation, but economists said such an effect shall not be overstated.
Zhuang Jian, senior economist with the Asian Development Bank mission in China, said "the new target is a practical response to the price increases, and again demonstrated the government's determination of macro-management".
"Sustained increases of international grain and oil prices are important factors that powered the CPI hikes in China. Such impacts have been way stronger than the influence of China's inflation to the global market," he said.
Crude oil prices have quadrupled in the past five years and exceeded 100 U.S. dollars per barrel for the first time at the beginning of this year. Edible oil prices nearly doubled last year on international markets.
Zhuang argued that despite the domestic inflation, the low labor cost in China had been one of the stabilizers of prices in the international market, particularly in the face of the weakening U.S. dollar. Textiles and industrial products, which accounted for the bulk of China's exports, remained not much affected by the inflation.