China has ‘room’ for imported inflation, but economic risks rising: PBOC adviser
A monetary policy advisor to China's central bank, Huang Yiping, stated on Tuesday that China has some capacity to absorb imported inflation, particularly from Middle East instability. While China faces upward price pressures, its consumer price index has remained below the official 2% target.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedA monetary policy advisor to China's central bank, Huang Yiping, stated on Tuesday that China has some capacity to absorb imported inflation, particularly from Middle East instability. While China faces upward price pressures, its consumer price index has remained below the official 2% target. Huang expressed concern that rising energy prices could negatively impact company profitability and the real economy. Globally, economies are anticipating inflationary shocks due to the US-Israel conflict with Iran, which has increased energy prices and costs for industrial inputs. China has been managing deflationary pressures due to weak domestic demand and oversupply.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedChina's CPI has remained below its official target of 2 per cent in recent years.
China has been grappling with deflationary pressures in recent years.
The US-Israel conflict with Iran has sent global energy prices soaring.
China has sufficient leeway to cope with imported inflationary shocks from Middle East instability.
Rise in energy prices will hit companies’ profitability.