- January CPI up 0.2% year-on-year, below the 0.8% increase in Jan
- Entrenched producer deflation weighs on manufacturers' profits
- Underlying trends suggest domestic demand still soft, reinforce bets for more policy steps
BEIJING, Feb 11 (Reuters) - China's consumer inflation cooled in January while producer price deflation persisted, highlighting once again the underlying weakness in domestic demand and a key challenge for policymakers looking to shore up an uneven economic recovery.
Beijing has repeatedly pledged to better align supply and demand and promised to raise people's incomes to spur goods and services consumption, but policy measures so far have delivered only modest results.
"With the imbalances between supply and demand set to persist, we doubt China's deflationary pressures will fade any time soon," said Zichun Huang, China economist at Capital Economics.
Data from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) on Wednesday showed the consumer price index (CPI) rose 0.2% from the same month last year, compared with a 0.8% increase in December and missing expectations in a Reuters poll for a 0.4% rise.
The producer price index (PPI) fell 1.4% year-on-year, with the downturn easing for a second month but extending a years-long deflationary trend in the world's second-biggest economy that policymakers are battling to overcome. Economists polled by Reuters had expected a 1.5% drop.
On a monthly basis, CPI edged up 0.2%, missing a forecast for a 0.3% increase and matching the rise in December.
Lynn Song, chief economist for Greater China at ING, said the monthly rise in CPI suggests that "overall we are still on track to see a general recovery of inflation in 2026," projecting full-year consumer inflation at 0.9%.
There is "a solid case" for further monetary policy easing this year, he said, cautioning that risks to ING's forecast could stem from the rollout of domestic policy and global price developments.
The moderation in the year-on-year rise of consumer prices was mainly due to a high year-ago base and sharper declines in energy prices, Dong Lijuan, a statistician at NBS, said in a statement.
Food prices dropped 0.7% on plunging pork and egg prices, although those of fresh vegetables and fruits both rose. Services prices edged up 0.1% year-on-year.
Consumer prices in January last year got a bump from the Lunar New Year holiday, which started in late January and pushed up food and services prices. The holiday this year will begin in mid-February.
SUPPLY-DEMAND MISMATCH WOES
Core CPI, which excludes volatile prices of food and fuel, rose 0.8% year-on-year last month, down from the 1.2% rise in December.
A government campaign to curb overcapacity and price competition in major industrial sectors, including solar energy and auto manufacturing, has somewhat mitigated factory-gate price deflation.
Capacity management in some sectors has improved the supply and demand structure, NBS' Dong said, pointing to narrower drops in non-metallic mineral products and ferrous metals smelting and rolling. Prices in nonferrous metals mining surged 22.7% while those in oil and gas extraction slumped 16.7%.
But PPI deflation has persisted and continues to weigh on industrial firms' profits, indicating the need for more policy measures to boost effective demand and address deep-rooted imbalance in the economy.
Chinese manufacturers still rely on exports to absorb their production capacity, with the country logging a whopping $1.2 trillion trade surplus in 2025 while fighting a trade war with the U.S.
Policymakers have been trying to boost consumption over the past two years, but analysts say more needs to be done to address the supply-demand imbalance.
Beijing has vowed to keep cracking down on excessive competition and ensure smoother exit of inefficient production capacity in order to stabilise prices.
The government also pledged to implement "more proactive" macroeconomic policies in 2026. The central bank in January cut sector-specific interest rates and earmarked more cheap loans to small and medium-sized tech and private firms.
China will unveil its next five-year development plan and GDP growth target for the year at the annual parliamentary session in early March.
Reporting by Yukun Zhang and Ryan Woo; Editing by Sam Holmes, Christian Schmollinger and Shri Navaratnam
Source: Reuters