![]() |
| Andhra Pradesh ~ India ~ International ~ City ~ Entertainment ~ Business ~ Bullion ~ Forex ~ Sports ~ Technology ~ Health ~ Features |
| Panchang ~ Manmohan Singh ~ Sonia Gandhi ~ Stock Markets ~ Gossip |
|
Home
/ India News / 2008 / January 2008 / January 7, 2008 Drop in Consumer Price Index tops Chinese New Year wishes |
Praja Rajyam membership drive from October 2
Curfew lifted in Jammu and Kashmir
UKs first black cop rubbishes ethnic recruit boycott call
Kylie Minogues new love shares uncanny resemblance to ex
Sensex opens up by over 379 points
Can the Aussies repeat their magic of 2004?
Most Alaskan glaciers are retreating, thinning, and stagnating
A drop in headline-hogging inflation figures is the top of the New Year wish list for Chinese, a recent poll shows.
New Delhi, Jan.7 : A drop in headline-hogging inflation figures is the top of the New Year wish list for Chinese, a recent poll shows.
Of the 3,200 people who participated in an online poll to choose their wishes from 21 options, four in five chose "drop in consumer price index (CPI)" as their foremost.
The recently launched Moneyweek magazine published the "Top New Year Wishes" poll conducted by the popular news portal QQ.com and the China Youth Daily.
The CPI - a key gauge of inflation - rose to an 11-year high of 6.9 percent in November last year, spurred mainly by increases in food prices.
Despite an eight percent rise in per capita net income, the highest since 1997, two in three urbanites and nearly three in five rural residents surveyed by the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences said price hikes were "the social issue of highest concern" last year.
Options given by the poll organizers included broad topics such as food safety and environment protection and hot stories like the launch of the Chang'e I lunar orbiter.
A successful Summer Olympics in Beijing followed the CPI drop as the second most commonly shared wish, with 60 percent choosing the option.
Some people overseas also shared the sentiment.
In an online poll conducted by the China Daily website, a European netizen named "rockmyword" said: "I wish the best for (the Games) because I love Beijing. I love watching track, gymnastics and swimming events."
"Effective control of pollution and corruption" was also high on the list with two in five people voting for the two options.
Beating other broad issues such as better employment, wishes for higher stock earnings jumped into the top 10 wishes.
The ranking indicates a large number of Chinese have bought stocks during the bull market, said the poll organizer. The Shanghai stock market soared 97 percent last year after more than doubling in value the previous year.
ANI