China's statistical method for calculating the consumer price
index (CPI) is accurate, the National Bureau of Statistics said
over the weekend in response to recent claims that it is
underestimated.
The statistics bureau announced earlier this month that the
growth of CPI, a major inflationary barometer, slowed from 1.5
percent in June to a mere 1 percent last month.
During the January to July period China's CPI grew 1.2 percent
year-on-year, also at a relatively low level.
However, many Chinese consumers believe prices have risen in
areas like medical services, education, petrol and housing in
recent months.
"The CPI announced by the National Bureau of Statistics is a
general reflection of average price changes for all kinds of
products and services across the country," the bureau said in a
statement.
"Therefore, individuals may have different feelings towards
price changes."
It cited petrol price increases as an example.
China raised the price of petrol by 10.6 percent in May, adding
to many car owners' costs in cities, but having a limited impact on
the CPI.
This is because a large proportion of Chinese consumers without
cars did not see a substantial increase in their transport costs as
fees for daily public transport like buses and trains did not
change.
According to the statistics bureau, China's CPI is compiled in
line with international practice.
The bureau has nearly 3,000 price investigators collecting the
prices of products and services once every five days across the
country.
The current CPI calculation system includes sectors such as
food, clothing, household facilities and services, medical
services, transportation, telecommunications and housing.
The bureau said the weight of each sector is determined through
a consumption expenditure survey of 120,000 households from both
urban and rural areas.
The bureau also makes small changes every year and a major
adjustment every five years in accordance with the country's
changing consumption structure.
For example, housing-related costs including construction,
decoration, rent and utilities, account for 13.2 percent of the
CPI, up from 9.7 percent in 2000.
But in response to claims that the CPI would have been higher
had it included property prices which are rising much faster than
the CPI the bureau said they are not and would not be included in
the CPI calculation.
House prices in 70 major Chinese cities rose 5.7 percent in July
compared with a year earlier, according to National Development and
Reform Commission statistics.
"From the statistical viewpoint, more people are buying houses
to transfer their current assets into fixed assets, and thus
property purchases usually fall into the category of investment
rather than consumption," it said.
In addition, the purchase of property is not synchronized with
consumption as it is a one-time expenditure.
"It is more rational to use rent and virtual rent money that
house owners may need to pay if they rent a house in a certain
period to reflect housing costs," the bureau said.
But the bureau conceded the CPI calculation, including its
statistical method, still needs further improvement to better
reflect daily consumption expenditure and the impact of price
changes on different groups of consumers.
(China Daily August 29, 2006)