Tuesday, August 9, 2011

China's inflation rate rises to 37-month high of 6.5 percent in July as economy cools

China's inflation rose to a 37-month high in July, adding to pressure on Chinese leaders to cool living costs while keeping economic growth on track as the U.S. and European outlook worsens.

Consumer prices in the world's second-largest economy rose 6.5 percent over a year earlier, up from June's 6.4 percent, data showed Tuesday. That was driven by a 14.8 percent jump in food costs, up from June's 14.4 percent and leaving the inflation rate well above the government's 4 percent target for the year.

The jump in prices came despite a slowdown in manufacturing and other economic activity in July following repeated interest rate hikes and other curbs imposed to cool an overheated economy.

Beijing has to strike a difficult balance between stopping inflation and easing controls to support Chinese companies as U.S. and European demand weakens, said IHS Global Insight analyst Alistair Thornton.

"They're in a really tough position now," Thornton said. "If they want to start loosening (monetary policy) and buoying up growth, they could face the risk of compounding higher-than-desired inflation."

Analysts blame the inflation spike on the dual pressures of consumer demand that is outstripping food supplies and money surging through the economy from a bank lending boom that helped China ward off the 2008 global crisis.

Rising prices, especially for food, are politically dangerous for the Communist Party because they erode economic gains that underpin its claim to power.

Beijing is trying to rein in economic growth that surged to 9.5 percent in the quarter that ended in June just as the United States, Japan and other governments are struggling to shore up their own lagging economies.

Some observers had expected at least one more Chinese rate hike this year but analysts said that now looked unlikely due to uncertainty following Standard & Poor's downgrade of U.S. sovereign debt.

"This is the kind of data that should trigger (an) interest rate hike, but the turmoil in global financial markets will probably delay the action," said Wei Yao, China economist for Societe General, in a report.

A survey by HSBC Corp. released earlier showed manufacturing contracted in July for the first time this year. HSBC's purchasing managers index fell to a 29-month low of 49.3 on a 100-point scale on which numbers below 50 show activity contracting.
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Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Cairo court upholds freeze on Mubarak's assets

The Cairo Criminal Court approved a freeze on the assets of former Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak and upheld a travel ban against him Tuesday as the nation moves forward in pressing corruption charges against the ousted leader.

Mubarak's attorney, Samir Shishtawi, said he has filed an appeal.

Egypt's Supreme Court is considering lifting the secret status that shields Mubarak's accounts and holdings, which could potentially unleash a flood of information.

Mubarak, who is believed to be living at his residence in the Red Sea resort town of Sharm el-Sheikh, is wanted for questioning in a corruption case.

Attorney General Abdel Maguid Mahmoud issued an order freezing the assets of Mubarak and his family on February 28 and prohibited them from leaving the country.

Mahmoud ordered the freeze for property owned by Mubarak, his wife, Suzanne, his two sons Alaa and Gamal Mubarak, and their wives and children, state-run EgyNews reported. The seizures include "movable properties, real estate, stocks, bonds and various financial assets."

It wasn't immediately clear how the order differed from an earlier order.

Mubarak, through his attorneys and in official filings, has described reports of immense wealth as "fabrications and baseless rumors."

Mubarak resigned February 11 after 18 days of protests against his rule.

Egyptian politician Mustafa Bakri, who has led the fight to press corruption charges against Mubarak, said he believes the former president will stand trial.

Bakri, a member of Egypt's parliament who lost his seat after filing corruption cases against various officials, provided documents indicating Mubarak's family has secret bank accounts totaling more than 200 million Egyptian pounds ($147 million), according to EgyNews.

"This is the second stage of the revolution," Bakri told CNN.
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