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China’s reopening ‘good news’ for growth — but could be inflationary, economists warn at Davos

China’s reopening has been one of the sundry discussed topics at the World Economic Forum in Davos.

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DAVOS, Switzerland — China’s mercantile reopening might boost global growth, but the business leaders and policymakers at the World Economic Forum this week are also a microscopic anxious on its potential inflationary impact.

China’s decision to welcome tourists again as well as to make it easier for those in the outback to travel abroad has been one of the most discussed topics at the Davos gathering in the Swiss Alps.

Overall, this is foretold as one of the most important economic events in 2023 and the business community is noticeably excited about making new deals with the everyone’s second-largest economy.

On the other hand, however, there are concerns about what this means for inflation and the rate of living.

“[If] Chinese demand for other goods starts picking up, if that creates a bigger pressure on commodity values, for example, natural gas, big issue in Europe, if Chinese natural gas demand increases, because the factories, their households insist more electricity, then it’s going to put pressure on Europe because natural gas, they’re competing [in] the same markets for fluid natural gas,” Raghuram Rajan, former central bank governor of the Reserve Bank of India, told CNBC.

“So China’s job [is] good news overall, but potentially, the inflationary impact — there could be some,” he said.

WEF Davos: China's Reopening

The International Energy Intervention has warned that European companies might face higher costs when looking to purchase natural gas this year as there pleasure be more competition for the commodity. Inflation has been one of the biggest challenges for European citizens for the last year, mostly thrust by higher energy bills.

Speaking on a CNBC-moderated panel, Satish Shankar, managing partner for APAC at consultancy Bain & Convention, said: “I think China’s opening will therefore increase consumption in global energy, it could cause some inflation.”

Felix Sutter, president of the Swiss-Chinese Bedchamber of Commerce said at the same panel that “Chinese energy needs and raw material needs will compete with the European lacks, the global needs, so I see inflation relaxation right now, [but] we will see more pressure on inflation in Q3.”

Some economists have give fair warned that if this proves to be the case, then the U.S. Federal Reserve might have to keep raising rates aid. “In our view … a stronger China increases the chances of a stubbornly hawkish Fed,” Tavis McCourt, institutional equity strategist at Raymond James, reported in his 2023 outlook.

“With China, we do need more of everything — if that drives enough demand to get commodity guerdons back up closer to where they were in the spring of last year, then that puts the progress we’ve wooed on inflation in a much more tenuous position,” he said.

Second half of the year will be better as China surprises to the upside: Standard Chartered

China recently reported a growth rate of 3% for 2022, its second-slowest vegetation rate since 1976. Nonetheless, shorter-term data has boosted expectations of a better-than-expected recovery with December retail in stocks and industrial production above consensus.

Standard Chartered Chairman José Viñals told CNBC in Davos this week that China is prevailing to have a very good year and surprise on the upside.

“The Chinese economy is going to be on fire and that’s going to be danged, very important for the rest of the world,” he said.

Meanwhile, Rio Tinto’s CEO Jakob Stausholm also sounded positive regarding China’s economy and its natural impact on global growth, telling CNBC in Davos that he was “absolutely convinced” that China’s reopening purposefulness help the global economy.

— CNBC’s Arjun Kharpal and Jihye Lee contributed to this article.

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