BEIJING, Dec. 22 (Xinhua) -- Public satisfaction with
China's consumer prices fell to a record low in the fourth quarter, with only
10.8 percent of urban people expressing satisfaction, according to a survey by
the People's Bank of China.
Sixty percent of urban residents felt prices remained
high in the fourth quarter, 0.5 of a percentage point up from the previous
quarter.
Most entrepreneurs, bankers and urban residents were
pessimistic about prices in the first quarter of 2007, believing inflation
pressures were "accumulating", according to the survey.
But the percentage of those who considered the price
level "unacceptably high" dropped slightly for the first time this year,due to
salary increases for civil servants and seasonal pay rises for urban residents.
The percentage data for this figures was unavailable
in the central bank's report.
China's consumer price index (CPI), the country's
main measure of inflation, will rise two percent in 2007, compared with this
year's predicted 1.4 percent, according to a central bank forecast.
The index is expected to climb from 1.8 percent in
the fourth quarter this year to 2.2 percent in the second quarter next year.
Then it will fall to 1.8 percent again at the end of 2007.
The survey also showed the sale price index rose 1.1
percentage points to reach a 10-year high in the fourth quarter, confirming
beliefs that prices are high.
Meanwhile, purchase prices of production materials
dropped three quarters in a row, continuing to enable enterprises to reduce
production costs and expand profits.
Fifty-four percent of the bankers surveyed and 86.8
percent of entrepreneurs said China's economy performed "normally" in the fourth
quarter, compared with 25.1 percent and 83.8 percent respectively in the third
quarter.