But falling prices there could end up being good news for the rest of the world.
However, falling prices there aren't necessarily bad news for everyone else.
In China, prices are falling rather than risingData from the National Bureau of Statistics published Wednesday showed China's factory-gate prices, as measured by the producer price index, plunging 4.4% year-on-year in July for a tenth straight month of declines.
Falling prices in the world's second-biggest economy could "give central bankers in the US, UK and Europe pause for thought when they weigh up their next steps," according to AJ Bell investment director Russ Mould.
So deflation in China might end up being bad news for Beijing – but a blessing in disguise for the rest of the world.
Persons:
it's, China's, Hargreaves Lansdow n's, Steve Lansdown, AJ Bell, Russ Mould
Organizations:
Service, Privacy, Apple, Nike, Federal Reserve, National Bureau, Statistics, Beijing, Bank of England
Locations:
China, Wall, Silicon, Beijing, West, Saudi Arabia, Russia, Ukrainian