China's food prices jumped 21.4 per cent over a year earlier in February as anti-virus efforts disrupted supplies, adding to pressure on communist leaders who are trying to revive economic activity.
Overall consumer prices rose 5.2 per cent over a year ago, down from January's eight-year high of 5.4 per cent but well above the ruling Communist Party's traditional annual target, government data showed Tuesday.
Pork prices, which have more than doubled over the past year due to an outbreak of African swine fever that disrupted supplies, rose by 9.3 per cent compared with January.
The government reported no year-on-year price increase.
The price of fresh vegetables rose 9.5 per cent over a year ago.
The government has yet to announce this year's inflation target, but in previous years it has tried to keep consumer price increases below 3 per cent.
Food prices spiked after panic buying in January sparked by the suspension of most access to Wuhan, the city at the center of the coronavirus outbreak.
The government announced a crackdown on hoarding and price gouging.
Travel and other controls disrupted shipments of food to crowded Chinese cities and animal feed to farmers.
That left supermarket shelves temporarily depleted and depressed the flow of poultry and livestock to slaughterhouses.
The ruling party ordered local officials to speed supplies to markets.
The coronavirus hit as Chinese leaders were struggling to rebuild the country's pork industry following the outbreak of African swine fever, which killed or prompted authorities to destroy more than 1 million animals. Farmers allowed herds to dwindle.
The government is promising farmers subsidies and other aid, but industry analysts say China's pig herd won't return to normal size until next year.
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