'Inflation' beats 'corruption' to top of public concerns

(Xinhua)
Updated: 2008-01-04 21:19

BEIJING -- Rising prices of consumer goods have become the top concern of urban and rural residents, followed by "income gap" and "corruption," according to a survey by the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (CASS).

A vendor waits for customers at a farmer's market in Nanjing, Jiangsu province, December 11, 2007. Rising prices of consumer goods have become the top concern of urban and rural residents. [Agencies]

Results of the survey on urban and rural residents' life satisfaction were published in CASS's 2008 Blue Paper of Society on Friday.

Related readings:
 Rising inflation keeps urban poor struggling
 Govt orders actions to contain amounting inflation pressure
 Economy, inflation to grow in slower pace in 2008
 CPC offical warns on staying vigilant against corruption

 Officials asked to guard against corruption in holiday season

 Anti-corruption website crashes on first day

Director of the Institute of Sociology under CASS, Li Peilin, said that 30.5 percent of the people surveyed chose "rising prices of consumer goods" as the most serious social problem, followed by "income gap" and "corruption."

Both urban and rural residents feel the pressure from rising prices of consumer goods in 2007, according to home visits conducted in October of 2007 in seven cities, seven small towns and their surrounding rural areas, and eight rural areas in Huangpo district of Wuhan City, capital of central Hubei Province.

"Laid-off and re-employment" and "social security" used to be top concerns in the 1999-2005 period. But "Rising prices of consumer goods", to which 66.5 percent of urban residents and 57.5 percent of rural residents surveyed expressed concern, jumped to the top of the list this time. "Housing reform" with 24.6 percent and "food and drug safety" with 26.6 percent ranked second on the lists of concerns of urban and rural residents, respectively.

The country's accumulated Consumer Price Index (CPI) increased by 4.6 percent in the first 11 months of 2007, to which food price hike contributed more than 80 percent, reported China Finance Information on Friday.


(For more biz stories, please visit Industry Updates)