Buy Sell Resources My Office Chinese Manufacturer
    Sell Buy Corporation Information      
Home > Resources
Manage  
HK remains No. 1 overseas investor on Chinese mainland
Hyundai chief handed 3-year suspended sentence
Former liquor firm bosses face prosecution
China Eastern seals a deal with Singaporean airliner
WTO to rule on U.S., Mexcican allegations of Chinese subsidies
Chinese court awards US$25,500 in video piracy case
carve out  
China's auto output, sales both to hit record 9 mln units in 2007
China considers lowering threshold for investment in QDII products
China to restructure telecommunications industry
US, China tackle food safety issues
AmCham-China speaks highly of China's new anti-monopoly law
US toy giant recalls 27,000 Chinese art sets

Resources  
Tokyo stocks up in morning trading
China's CPI rises 4.9% in August
China's PPI rises 10.1 percent in August
CPI drops to lowest in 14 months
China's industrial output growth slows to 12.8% in August
China's retail sales up 23.2% in August

 
Cheaper oil could lead to commodity price reform 
BEIJING, Sept. 9 (Xinhua) -- Cheaper international crude oil would be a good opportunity for China to reform its commodity prices, said an expert with the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC).

Chen Dongqi, vice president of the NDRC's Academy of Macroeconomic Research estimated crude oil to fall to under 70 U.S. dollars a barrel in coming months. Currently, oil is more than 100 U.S. dollars a barrel.

"It would be a rare chance for China to accelerate its price reform of oil, electricity, gas, water and grain products," he said. "This chance only appeared once, shortly after the Asian Financial Crisis. We should make good use of it this time," said Chen.

China had been suppressing the prices of commodities since last year in order to keep consumer prices down. For example, the NDRC had interfered with coal prices and the country's domestic oil prices.

Most power and refinery plants are reporting losses and are pressing for a market-oriented energy pricing system.

The recent plunge in crude prices, together with a weakening greenback, would ease pressure from imported inflation on overall prices in China. The upward pressure of the consumer price index is also expected to ease in the latter half supported by a bumper summer grain harvest, all facilitating a reform on resource prices.

Chen said price reform should be done in a gradual way. "In implementing reform, we should avoid too much immediate shock to prevent triggering a second wave of inflation."






Contact us | About us | Link
Copyright Notice © 2004-2006,eng.863171.com Corporation and its licensors. All rights reserved.