KEY POINTS
  • China will fare the worst if spiking inflation, slowing growth and rising interest rates lead to stagflation, according to the results of a stress test of 20,000 companies conducted by credit rating agency, S&P Global Ratings.
  • Stagflation is characterized by rising prices and slowing economic growth or high unemployment.
  • "Now that China's growth is slowing down, they're taking a double hit, both from slowdown in growth and price pressures coming up from overseas because some of the components are being imported," said Terry Chan, senior research fellow at S&P Global Ratings.

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China will fare the worst if spiking inflation, slowing growth and rising interest rates lead to stagflation, according to the results of a stress test of 20,000 companies conducted by credit rating agency, S&P Global Ratings.

Stagflation is characterized by rising prices and slowing economic growth or high unemployment.

In this article