Brian McCarthy, managing principal at Macrolens, says that "handcuffs" it from "executing the kind of aggressive stimulus ...
China is suffering from deflation, devaluation, capital flight and the loss of foreign investment — all at the same time.
While much of the global financial community was glued to the latest plot twists in the Trump 2.0 show in recent months, ...
China’s deflationary pressures were most severe in its industrial sector for a second straight year, in a sign of a deep ...
China has failed to break a deflationary cycle and is now on track for the longest streak of economy-wide price declines ...
Classic economic theory tells us that deflation means consumers defer spending because things will be cheaper in the future.
Beijing hit its GDP growth target of 5 percent in 2024, according to its statistics bureau—but deflationary pressures remain.
Gao’s sin? Saying that China may have grown just 2% over the last two or three years, less than half the rate Xi’s government ...
China's manufacturing activity unexpectedly contracted in January, an official factory survey showed on Monday, its weakest ...
China's economy grew 5% in 2024, meeting its growth target. Analysts expected China's GDP growth to be 4.9%, close to the 5% ...
Many investment banks have suggested waiting to allocate to China until the tariff picture clears up. This line of thinking ...
Therefore, China’s deflation is a classic case of debt-driven deflation, involving simultaneous drops in wages and prices, rising unemployment rates, and an increase in the real value of debt.