Last month this blog reported hockey-stick Chinese price increases for certain industrial commodities since the Iran war began in late February that were as high as 40-to-77% for plastics, fuel, and chemicals. Gasoline and diesel prices eased somewhat during April, but elevated prices for sulphuric acid, liquified natural gas, and lithium persisted into the first 10 days of May. The spike in polyester prices has stimulated a rebound in cotton use, but agricultural prices are mostly insulated from the crisis so far. China's April 2026 PPI shows a modest trend of rising prices that seems to have turned around the deflationary tendency that plagued the Chinese economy last year. The average price for industrial raw materials rose 1.2% in March 2026 and 2.1% in April. These were the first month-on-month increases exceeding 1% in the past year. A year ago at this time the raw material price index was declining--it was down -0.7% between March and April 2025. An update of pr...
China has fired two agriculture ministers over the past two years, one of whom got a death sentence. This appears to be the routine discovery of bad apples in the system, but it reflects the desperation of Chinese leaders to restore confidence in the Party's leadership. Much like a religious revival, new Agriculture Minister Zhang Zhu's first meeting with employees two days after being appointed urged communist party members to "forge their collective will and soul," translate their beliefs into collective actions, promptly correct any deviations, and address malpractices and corruption issues that directly affect the public, demonstrating "unwavering loyalty to the Party." This is the latest in a series of meetings held this year to lecture communist cadres about studying Xi Jinping thought, giving up corruption and lax work attitudes, and pursuing their jobs with sincerity. These meetings reflect the Party's worries that its hold on the countryside i...