KEY POINTS
  • Chinese Premier Li Keqiang and other leaders emphasized at a meeting Wednesday they would increase support for privately run businesses — first, in the persistent issue of getting financing, and second, for coping with rising prices of raw materials.
  • The statement marked the latest central government announcement in the last few weeks on record high commodity prices, as authorities rush to limit the negative impact on the economy.
  • "Commodity prices are disconnecting from fundamentals, building up downside risks" for the second half of the year, Morgan Stanley economist Robin Xing and his team said in a report Wednesday.
Workers make a rotary kiln at the workshop of Jiangsu Haijian Stock on May 26, 2021 in an eastern province of China.

BEIJING — The global surge in commodity prices is adding another burden to China's small businesses, many of which have barely put the coronavirus pandemic behind them.

In a sign of how severe the problem is, Chinese Premier Li Keqiang and other leaders emphasized at a meeting Wednesday they would increase support for privately run businesses — first, in the persistent issue of getting financing, and second, for coping with rising prices of raw materials.