Buy Sell Resources My Office Chinese Manufacturer
Sell Buy Corporation Information
Home > Resources
Resources
China to become U.S. third largest export market by year end
China's central bank hikes interest rates
NGO: 90 multinationals listed as polluters in China
China to rectify and regulate drug market
Collusion by noodle makers partly to blame for inflation surge
Global credit worries pull down domestic stocks
carve out
Market moves north despite sudden rate hike
Nike wins counterfeiting lawsuit against Chinese shoemakers
Case study: global degrees
China Mobile's first-half profit up 25.7%
China to reduce domestic flights, ban new airlines
ADB joins road network development in Guangxi, China
Industry
Chinese shares break 5,000-point mark
China says US soy beans unsafe
Shanghai stocks a step closer to 5,000 marks
Shanghai stocks up as global markets rebound
Domestic stocks slide over US housing-loan crisis
Urban residents in Beijing occupy 20-sqm-house area per capita
China: Pork price drops for two weeks, vegetable prices soar
BEIJING, Aug. 23 (Xinhua) -- The average wholesale price of pork from Aug. 13 to 19 saw a week-on-week drop of 1.4 percent, according to the Ministry of Commerce.


It was the second consecutive drop in pork prices, which have almost doubled in the last seven months due to short supply and mounting production costs.


From Aug. 6 to 12, pork prices fell 1.5 percent from the previous week after efforts taken by the government and producers to increase supply began to take effect, said the ministry.


However, as prices of suckling pigs and pig feed are expected to stay high over the Mid-autumn Festival and National Day holidays through to October, pork demand will remain strong and pork prices are likely to remain high, predicted the ministry.


Due to harvesting and transporting difficulties caused by heavy rains, from Aug. 13 to 19, caraway prices rose 46 percent week-on-week, while rape was up 21.6 percent and cucumbers up 18.8 percent.


Last week, of the 40 major edible farm products monitored by the ministry, the prices of 31 items rose while eight items recorded price drops and one item price stayed flat.


In July, China's consumer price index, or CPI, rose by a 33-month-high of 5.6 percent on the back of food price hikes. The key inflation indicator was well above the government-set target of 3 percent.


About us | Link
Copyright Notice © 2005-2010,www.863171.net Corporation and its licensors. All rights reserved.