China combats price rise, speculation as snow wreaks havoc

By Xinhua

Beijing : Besides battling the worst winter in five decades, Chinese authorities find themselves fighting hoarding, price rise and speculations to maintain market order.


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The extreme winter, which has hit 19 Chinese localities, has driven up costs of essential supplies, but the worst is still not over and the situation is compounded by elements seeking to harvest some quick bucks from the crisis.

As bad weather threatens to last into the Chinese Year of Rat, the price bureau of the eastern Zhejiang province said it has brushed off several supermarkets’ request for price hikes.

A former railway official in the central China’s Hunan province has been prosecuted for collaborating with ticket scalpers and making undeserved money.

Luo Zhongxing, a former manager of the railway station in the city of Huaihua, was suspected of reserving tickets for illegal dealers using his power.

A train ticket during the New Year holiday passenger rush has for years proven the hardest-won commodity in China. Scalpers, some of whom have special connections within the railway system, often buy up tickets, which they resell for twice as much.

A restaurant in southwest China’s Guizhou province was fined 50,000 yuan (about $7,000) Saturday over an unauthorized price hike of one yuan for each helping of noodles.

The restaurant, located in downtown Guiyang, capital of the mountainous province that suffered snow, sleet and subsequent power and water shortages in the past three weeks, had raised the noodle price from six yuan to seven yuan without the approval of the local price bureau.

“The local price regulations ban businesses from raising prices in times of natural disasters,” said Bi Jin, an official in charge of market supervision at the city’s price bureau.

“We insisted that prices for milk and instant noodles should remain stable now and during the Chinese New Year holiday,” said head of the bureau Wang Jiahui.

Yet Wang foresees price hikes for most vegetables starting Sunday as several greenhouses collapsed under the weight of snow and ice.

Heavy snowfall starting Saturday left an average 30 cm of snow in most parts of the province. In some areas, snow measured 60 cm on ground.

At least 70 restaurants in Xi’an, capital of the northwestern Shaanxi province, vowed Saturday they would not raise prices for food, beverage and services during the weeklong holiday starting Wednesday.

The promise was well received among the residents, many of whom were planning to dine out during the holiday.

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