Prices climb faster in city on fuel, food costs   (Shanghai Daily)  Updated: 2006-06-20 06:01  Shanghai's inflation grew 
faster in May as fuel costs rose and food prices continue to increase. 
The city's Consumer Price Index rose 1.5 percent year on year last month, 
after adding 0.8 percent in April, the Shanghai Statistics Bureau said 
yesterday. The combined growth in the first five months of this year was 1.1 
percent. 
 Food costs, making up one third of the index, added 2 percent year on year in 
May, after increasing 1.4 percent a month earlier. 
 The cost of oil in the city rose again last month after the National 
Development and Reform Commission raised fuel prices for the second time this 
year. Petrol pump prices in Shanghai jumped 16.5 percent in May from a year 
earlier and diesel retail prices grew 18.2 percent year on year. 
 "The rising fuel costs led to higher service prices as the city allowed taxi 
drivers to pass on some of the higher costs to consumers," said Liu Hui, a 
statistician at the bureau. 
 As a result, taxi charges in Shanghai increased 5.2 percent. 
 Meanwhile, the city's fixed-asset investment in the first five months 
expanded 8.6 percent from a year earlier as the government boosted metro line 
construction in preparation for the World Expo in 2010. But the growth in FAI 
was 0.3 percentage point smaller than that of the first four months as property 
spending declined for the first time. 
 Investments reached 137.9 billion yuan (US$17.2 billion) in January to May, 
the bureau said. 
 Spending in infrastructure construction reached 35.1 percent in the first 
five months, up 13.1 percent from a year earlier, due to increased moves to add 
several metro lines to the city's network. 
 A total of nine metro lines will be in service for visitors to the 2010 World 
Expo and commuters to other parts of Shanghai, city government officials said in 
April. 
 Real estate investment shed 0.2 percent in the first five months from a year 
earlier as government efforts to cool the property market took hold. 
 The bureau also said that Shanghai's retail sales in May climbed 13.6 percent 
from a year earlier to 28.3 billion yuan, as the Labor Day holiday spurred 
consumption. 
   
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