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China Is the Wild Card for Global Inflation in 2023

The country’s long-awaited emergence from Covid Zero would ignite its economy and put upward pressure on prices around the world.

Residents line up at a Covid testing facility in Shanghai on Dec. 2. Photographer: Qilai Shen/Bloomberg
Residents line up at a Covid testing facility in Shanghai on Dec. 2. Photographer: Qilai Shen/Bloomberg
(Bloomberg Businessweek) -- The broad view for next year is that inflation around the world will slow as interest rates rise, recession looms and consumers spend less. Cooling commodity, food and energy prices, magnified by the favorable comparison with last year’s steep gains, will combine to slow the broad rate of inflation.
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