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Citigroup analysts said this week that falling prices in China could help to hasten moves by central banks in emerging markets to cut interest rates this year, particularly in countries that consume relatively large shares of Chinese goods. “We as investors are only just starting to connect the dots” on how falling prices imported from China might play out across markets, said Luis Costa, global head of emerging markets sovereign debt strategy at Citigroup. “The question is the magnitude.” Low-cost Chinese-made goods have been a feature of global trade since Beijing joined the WTO in 2001. But weak domestic demand as a result of China’s prolonged property bust and a weaker renminbi are leading investors to forecast that exports could be an especially powerful force this year. The prospect of China exporting deflation matters for developing economies because “potentially, a big Chinese export boom in 2024 will lead to sustained demand for Latin American, African, Kazakh or Indonesian commodities”, said Charles Robertson, head of macro strategy at FIM Partners. “Chinese deflation in manufactured goods may still allow a little inflation in commodities.” Not all economists believe that deflationary forces coming out of China will have a significant impact on global prices. Helen Qiao and Miao Ouyang, Bank of America economists, said that Chinese export prices would be unlikely to influence significantly consumer prices in advanced economies. “For the US, we estimate the share of Chinese imports in the total US goods consumption is less than 5 per cent — and goods account for approximately 40 per cent of the US CPI basket,” they said. Stephen Stanley, chief US economist at Santander Bank, said that any impact was likely to be small. “The biggest deflationary force in goods prices here of late has been used vehicles, which has nothing to do with China,” he said. But some economists think that US imports from China are being undercounted, which could make the impact on prices greater than it might appear. In recent years for example, China’s trade data has been indicating that it exports tens of billions dollars more than the US assesses it imports, Brad Setser, a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, has noted.
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