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To: TobagoJack who wrote (3249)12/11/2003 8:45:42 PM
From: ldo79  Respond to of 110194
 
Reuters
UPDATE - China reports surprising 3 pct inflation for Nov
Thursday December 11, 8:31 pm ET

BEIJING, Dec 12 (Reuters) - China's benchmark consumer price index rose three percent in November from a year earlier, the fastest pace in more than six and half years, due to surging food prices, the government said on Friday.

The November price rise was the fastest monthly rate since April 1997, when CPI rose 3.2 percent year on year.

biz.yahoo.com

Regards,
ldo79



To: TobagoJack who wrote (3249)12/12/2003 12:31:14 AM
From: BubbaFred  Respond to of 110194
 
The era of ficticious capitalism

prudentbear.com.

Message 19587937



To: TobagoJack who wrote (3249)12/12/2003 8:46:46 AM
From: MulhollandDrive  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 110194
 
believe both statements are accurate descriptions of the right now

thank you jay...

when i said the industrialization of china is inexorably tied to the good fortunes of the u.s. it was not implied that it would or should remain so indefinitely...

but there can be no question it is the u.s. economic engine that is priming the china pump..

and the domestic chinese economy will quite obviously at some time have to wean itself (along with the rest of asia and europe) from excessive reliance on u.s. demand if china's current momentum continues at this torrid pace and results in overcapacity

8:35am 12/12/03
U.S. trade gap widens in October By Maggie McNeil
WASHINGTON (CBS.MW) -- The U.S. trade deficit widened by 1.0 percent in October to $41.8 billion, the Commerce Department said. The trade deficit was slightly above the consensus forecast of Wall St. economists, who had forecast a deficit of $41.6 billion. Imports rose 2.1 percent to a record $129.7 billion, exports rose 2.6 percent to $88.0 billion. The trade deficit is on track to set a new record this year. For the first ten months of the year, the trade gap totalled $409 billion, up 21.3 percent from the same period a year ago. The U.S. trade deficit with China widened to a record $13.6 billion in October, easily beating the previous record of $12.7 billion set only last month.






cbs.marketwatch.com;