China’s consumer price index (CPI) fell month-over-month in May 2026, signaling renewed deflationary pressure after a short-lived improvement in price dynamics. According to data updated on 10 June 2026, CPI declined by 0.1% compared with April, on a month-over-month basis.
The reading marks a reversal from April 2026, when CPI had risen 0.3% versus March, offering tentative signs of strengthening domestic demand. The latest May figure, measured against April’s level, underscores how fragile China’s price recovery remains, with the economy still struggling to generate sustained inflationary momentum.
On a month-over-month comparison, the “actual” May print of -0.1% reflects the change from April to May, while the “previous” 0.3% represented the change from March to April. The shift from positive to negative territory will likely refocus market attention on the strength of China’s consumer sector and the potential need for further policy support to stabilize prices and growth.