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China cuts domestic fuel prices again to reduce the impact of rising oil prices

China has again reduced its gasoline and diesel price increases to half of what they usually are. This is to try to reduce the rising oil prices caused by the Iran War and the closure of the Strait of Hormuz.

The oil prices continued to rise after Iran rejected the United States' ceasefire proposal and as a deadline for Tehran, set by U.S. president Donald Trump, to come up with a deal before he was "taken out", grew closer.

The NDRC (National Development and Reform Commission) announced that the retail gasoline and diesel prices would increase by 420 yuan and 400 yuan, respectively, at midnight on Tuesday.

A 50-litre tank containing?92-octane gas will now cost an average car owner $2.4 extra.

According to the statement, under its scheduled pricing mechanisms, the increases would've been 800 yuan yuan yuan yuan yuan yuan yuan yuan 770 yuan yuan respectively.

NDRC reported that the government continues to implement measures for controlling refined oil prices in order to reduce the impact of increasing international oil prices on domestic markets.

Every 10 working days, the agency adjusts gasoline and diesel retail prices across the country. The adjustment rate is based on changes in crude oil prices, and includes average processing costs, taxes, distribution expenses, and profit margins.

China raised the price of gasoline and diesel on March 23, by 1,160 and 1,115 Yuan per ton respectively. This was a reduction of about half the increase scheduled.

Thanks to its oil reserves, rapid adoption and diversified supply, the world's second largest oil consumer has weathered oil scares better than other Asian countries.

Official data from the manufacturing purchasing managers' index (PMI), showed that the impact of the war on the Chinese economy and its end users was minimal. This resilience has not been extended to the airline sector, where fuel surcharges have had to be raised.

Economists have warned that the war may spark a "bad inflation" in China as a shock in input costs threatens to squeeze the margins of the largest manufacturing base on earth.

(source: Reuters)