It was 25 C below zero when grandpa Wen, as China's premier is affectionately known, visited the heart of the Xilingol pasture in the autonomous region of Inner Mongolia to greet herders in their homes on New Year's Day.
During the trip he also inspected commodity supplies and prices at a local supermarket. Freezing cold as it was, what he could not have failed to notice was that economically, and therefore politically, things were heating up.
Inflation in China was recorded at 4.9 percent that month, indicating a general rise in prices measured against a standard level of purchasing power. It was a far cry from the historical high of 27.70 percent reached in October 1994 and far above the record low of minus 2.20 percent recorded in March 1999, but the bald figure hid a welter of detail.
Food prices soared 10.3 percent in January on an annual basis, and the prices of grain saw an increase of 15.1 percent. Fruit prices increased by 34.8 percent and the price of vegetables rose 2 percent.
As every leader knows, one of the things people care passionately about is how much they have got in their pocket and what they can afford to buy or save. They also need to eat. And, of course, gasoline comes in handy. China raised the price of fuel by 350 yuan ($53) a metric ton on Feb 20. The adjustment was the first this year but the second one in two months. It increased the benchmark retail price of gasoline by as much as 0.28 yuan a liter and diesel by 0.3 yuan a liter.
On top of all this, there has been little sign that house prices will take a tumble. In a city such as Beijing, where it's not unusual to fork out 3 million yuan for a small apartment and white collar workers are lucky to earn 10,000 yuan a month, any feelings of powerlessness they possess can well be understood.
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