Business
Slowdown in rising cost-of-living set for December pause, say economists
UK inflation could have ticked higher last month, as Christmas getaways helped fuel price rises at the end of the year, economists have said.
Some economists are expecting the rate of Consumer Prices Index (CPI) inflation to have risen in December after falling sharply the previous month.
Rob Wood and Elliott Jordan-Doak, economists for Pantheon Macroeconomics, said they were forecasting CPI to rise to 3.3% in December, from 3.2% in November.
A hike to tobacco duties, which was announced at the autumn budget in November, is set to have pushed up overall inflation during the month.
The price of plane tickets and hotels are also expected to have soared amid stronger demand for Christmas travel.
Analysts forecast that airfares could have jumped by about 30% between November and December.
But economists stressed that the choice of date for the Office for National Statistics (ONS) to collect the latest inflation data would be crucial, as prices would have differed throughout the month.
If it was collected later in the month, travel prices could have been much higher in line with the school holidays, pushing up the overall rate of inflation.
Andrew Goodwin, chief UK economist for Oxford Economics, said he thought the slowdown in the rising cost of living was “temporarily halted” in December.
He said: “Some of November’s downward pressure came from volatile categories, including clothing, airfares, and accommodation services, and this is likely to have unwound in December, although the choice of date for collecting the data will likely have a crucial bearing on the outturn for airfares.”
He is predicting a much sharper increase of CPI inflation to 3.6% in December.
On the other hand, analysts for Barclays said they thought inflation would remain unchanged at 3.2% in December.
They forecast energy price inflation to have slowed, while food and drink price rises to have steadied at the end of the year.
But experts said they thought inflation was still heading downwards this year.
Victoria Scholar, head of investment for Interactive Investor, said that “longer term, the trajectory for inflation is still on the downside, heading back towards the 2% target later this year”.
“November’s budget from the Chancellor was largely viewed as disinflationary owing to its contractionary fiscal measures, including tax increases and spending cuts,” she said.
“Plus, there are growing signs of slack in the labour market, also easing inflationary pressures in the UK economy.”
Business
Asian stocks today: Markets inch higher mirroring Wall Street gains; Kospi jumps 10%, Nikkei up 1,400 points – The Times of India
Asian stocks inched higher on Thursday, after days of trading in red amid ongoing Middle East tensions. This comes as equities were lifted by a rebound on Wall Street as oil prices paused their recent spike and economic updates painted a more positive picture of the American economy. In South Korea, Kospi hit a pause on its downward rally to add a whopping 10% or 513 points, to reach 5,606. Japan’s Nikkei 225 also climbed 2.7% to 55,713. Hong Kong’s HSI also traded in green, rising 353 points to 25,603 as of 9:10 am. Shanghai and Shenzhen added 0.9% and 1.7% respectively. Gains elsewhere in the region were more modest. Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 added 0.3% to 8,927.20, while New Zealand’s benchmark index moved 0.9% higher. In contrast, US futures indicated a subdued start ahead. Futures linked to the Dow Jones Industrial Average were almost unchanged, while S&P 500 futures ticked up 0.2%. The S&P 500 advanced 0.8% on Wednesday, clawing back much of the decline seen since the onset of the Iran conflict. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 0.5%, and the Nasdaq Composite outperformed with a 1.3% gain. Globally, market sentiment has remained sensitive to developments in the Middle East, with oil price swings continuing to steer trading direction. Crude prices eased during Wednesday’s session. Brent crude briefly moved above $84 a barrel before settling at $81.40, roughly matching the previous day’s level. US benchmark crude edged up 0.1% to finish at $74.66 per barrel. By early Thursday, however, oil was on the rise again. Brent crude climbed 2.4% to $83.32 per barrel, while U.S. benchmark crude jumped 2.5% to $76.53 per barrel.
Business
China sets lowest economic growth target since 1991
It is also the first time the target has been lowered since it was cut to “around 5%” in 2023.
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Business
China takes ‘high stakes’ tech race up a notch with US as economic imbalances worsen | The Express Tribune
Premier Li Qiang said ‘multilateralism, free trade are under severe threat’, 7% increases in the defence budget, R&D
Chinese Prime Minister Li Qiang. PHOTO: ANADOLU
China on Thursday vowed to deepen investment in high-tech industries and scientific innovation, framing them as essential to bolstering national security and self-reliance amid rising geopolitical tensions and an intensifying rivalry with the US.
At the opening of the annual parliament meeting, Premier Li Qiang praised China’s ability to withstand US President Donald Trump’s tariff hikes, but said “multilateralism and free trade are under severe threat” and announced 7% increases in the defence budget and in research and development.
Li acknowledged an “acute” imbalance between strong supply and weak demand, subdued market expectations, and ongoing risks from a persistent property-sector downturn and high local government debt.
These challenges have pushed Beijing to set a slightly lower growth target of 4.5%–5% for this year, down from last year’s 5%, which was met largely through a one‑fifth surge in its trade surplus to a record $1.2 trillion.
China’s 15th five-year plan, as widely expected, pledged investments in innovation and industrial upgrading, as well as a “notable” – but unspecified – increase in household consumption as a share of economic output.
The combination of a lower growth target and higher outlays on research and strategic industries underscores Beijing’s bet that technological upgrading- not consumption – will drive its next phase of development despite growing structural pressures.
Last year’s trade punches with the Trump administration, which briefly escalated to embargo-like conditions of triple-digit tariffs, also showed the importance of its supply chain dominance as leverage.
“China’s government remains laser-focused on spurring technological breakthroughs and high-tech investment,” said Fred Neumann, chief Asia economist at HSBC. “In part, this is motivated by competition with the United States for control over the technologies of the future.”
“Many international observers may be left disappointed, therefore, by slower progress in rebalancing the economy away from investment towards consumption.”
China invests 20 percentage points of GDP more than the global average, while its households spend roughly 20 points less – a state-controlled, debt-driven development model that creates industrial overcapacity and fuels trade tensions abroad and deflationary pressures at home.
“The rebalancing challenge that China faces, and that will take years to achieve, is implicitly acknowledged by a weaker growth target for the coming year,” Neumann added.
The five-year plan aims to raise the value-added of “core digital economy industries” to 12.5% of GDP and roll out new policies for an integrated national data market and establish a system for AI security risk prevention.
These goals reflect President Xi Jinping’s vision of developing “new productive forces” to escape the middle-income trap, counter the demographic downturn, and enhance national security by insulating China from US export controls.
China pledged support for “breakthrough” developments across a range of industries, from farm seeds and biomedicine to areas at the cutting-edge of science, such as machine-brain interfaces. State-owned enterprises were urged to create demand for made-in-China technology like semiconductors and drones.
But the five-year plan also lists new ambitions in areas China already dominates. While accounting for 85% of the electric vehicle charging stations in the world, China aims to double their number within three years.
In AI, Beijing promised to build out “hyper-scale” computing clusters supported by cheap and abundant electricity.
“Beijing is trying to manage a ‘controlled glide’ in growth while building a new economy based on technology rather than property,” said Andy Ji, Asian FX & rates analyst at ITC Markets.
“It is a high-stakes rebalancing where the government is betting the house on AI and advanced manufacturing.”
Steady stimulus plans
Economists say a lower growth target allows Beijing to experiment with adjustments to industrial overcapacity, which could lead to some factory closures and job losses, but cautioned that this did not mean a departure from its production-focused growth model.
The US Supreme Court’s decision to strike down some of Trump’s tariffs and expectations that a meeting between the two countries’ presidents later in March could stabilise relations in the short term, bode well for such adjustments.
“The bigger context here is the China-US competition, but this year is the trade truce,” said Dan Wang, China director at Eurasia Group.
“It seems that China is taking advantage of this year to do some structural reform, which is the right direction for the economy in the long term, but it also means in the short term, the job market pressure is way higher.”
In terms of stimulus, China plans a budget deficit of 4.0% of GDP and has set special debt issuance quotas at 1.3 trillion yuan ($188.5 billion) for the central government and 4.4 trillion yuan for local authorities – all unchanged from last year.
China pledged to raise minimum monthly pensions by 20 yuan per person and basic medical insurance subsidies for rural, non-working people by 24 yuan – marginal, rather than structural, moves. It said it wants to increase education spending, subsidise childcare and reform public hospitals, acknowledging the demographic downturn.
Yuan Yuwei, fund manager at Trinity Synergy Investment, warned that China’s growth and policy aims for this year, prepared at the end of 2025, do not take into account the US-Israeli attacks in Iran.
“That’s very negative to China, which counts the Strait of Hormuz as a crucial trade route,” said Yuan.
($1 = 6.8969 Chinese yuan renminbi)
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