China’s big-city renters feel 20% inflation not headline 2%

epa03800436 Ground prepared for construction projects and new build slyscrapers dominate the skyline in the outskirts of Beijing, China 25 July 2013. Infrastructure and construction spending have been major drivers of the Chinese economy for more than a decade but as the government tries to rebalance the economy towards greater consumption the challenge is enormous. To forestall any collapse of confidence Premier Li Keqiang was quoted in state media as saying the state would consider further stimulus measures if required.  EPA/ADRIAN BRADSHAW

 

Bloomberg

Project manager Yuan Fang says she’s cutting spending and working overtime after a 20 percent surge in the cost of both her Beijing room rent and her favorite Japanese lunch boxes. Civil servant Neo Zhu, who bought an apartment in the eastern city of Hangzhou 10 years ago, feels costs of everything from gas to food are stable.
Yuan is putting her savings into gold to protect them from inflation. Zhu is confident his extra cash will be protected in a fixed-income fund.
The contrasting perspectives underscore China’s two-speed inflation picture, where living costs are stable in much of the country but surging in the largest cities, especially when housing is included. The consumer price index rose 2.1 percent from a year earlier in December, while factory gate prices jumped 5.5 percent, data showed.
Once soaring housing markets in metropolises such as Beijing and Shanghai are factored in, it’s easier to understand why the central bank has switched to tightening mode even though the economy is slowing and the headline inflation gauge is well below the government’s ceiling. That policy shift triggered the worst collapse in bonds in almost a decade.
“For college graduates in Beijing or Shanghai, rental can take up 50 percent of their pay checks,” said Ding Shuang, chief China economist at Standard Chartered Plc in Hong Kong, adding that what people spend on will dictate their inflation perceptions. “If you focus solely on the CPI, you wouldn’t understand why the People’s Bank of China can tolerate such rapid increases in bond yields.”
Surging property costs have lifted the cost of paying nannies, waiters and hairdressers in big cities. Yuan, 28, hasn’t been to the Japanese restaurant near her office for months, after it raised the price of a bento box to around 35 yuan ($5) from less than 30 yuan. She and her roommates paid 4,500 yuan a month for the three-bedroom flat in Beijing’s suburb before a rent hike in October took the payment to 5,500 yuan.
Her pain hasn’t shown up in the data — nationwide rentals rose a mere 2.9 percent in December. Residential costs account for about 20 percent of CPI, covering rent and management fees but not buying an apartment, according to Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp. in Singapore. Food accounts for 30 percent of the basket, with the rest including communications, travel and services.
“China inflation is never really
that accurate, and people have been criticizing it as underestimating price pressure,” said Wang Qian, chief
Asia-Pacific economist at Vanguard Investment Hong Kong Ltd. “Of course, people would want inflation compensation, they would expect the credit market to better price the risk premium to compensate for higher inflation.”

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