- Sputnik International
Asia
Find top stories and features from Asia and the Pacific region. Keep updated on major political stories and analyses from Asia and the Pacific. All you want to know about China, Japan, North and South Korea, India and Pakistan, Southeast Asia and Oceania.

Japanese Economy Shifts out of Recession

© Flickr / Balint FöldesiAt last month's World Economic Outlook briefing, experts from the IMF cast doubts regarding Japan's growth prospects for 2015, citing disappointing private domestic and foreign demand.
At last month's World Economic Outlook briefing, experts from the IMF cast doubts regarding Japan's growth prospects for 2015, citing disappointing private domestic and foreign demand. - Sputnik International
Subscribe
Data released on Monday reveals that Japan is experiencing a fragile recovery from recession, with growth below expectation.

Asia
Japan Closes Embassy in Yemen After Houthi Rebel Takeover
MOSCOW, February 16 (Sputnik) – Japanese government figures released on Monday show modest quarterly growth; GDP totaled 0.6 percent in the final quarter of 2014, lower than expected but enough to turn the tide of contraction and lift the economy out of the recession it experienced over the previous two quarters.

In the July-September period, the economy had shrunk 0.5 percent on a quarterly basis, and contracted by 1.9 percent in annual terms. However, in October-December, annualized GDP growth was 2.2 percent, lower than expected by analysts in a Reuters survey who gave a median prediction of 3.7 percent growth. A survey by the economic daily Nikkei had a median forecast of 0.9 percent on a quarterly basis.

Spending in the business sector grew by just 0.1 percent in the quarter, while consumer spending rose by 0.3 percent. Exports grew 2.7 percent compared to the third quarter, stimulated by a weak yen which has decreased in value by 28 percent against the dollar since December 2012, as a result of a massive quantitative easing program from the Bank of Japan.

The high-tech luxury resort in the Huis Ten Bosch amusement park in Nagasaki prefecture will have ten “actroids” supplementing the human staff. - Sputnik International
World's First Robot-Staffed Hotel to Open in Japan
In October 2014, the bank announced it was expanding its government bond purchase program to ¥80 trillion ($712 billion) a year, from the ¥60 trillion-70 trillion the government was previously spending on expanding the monetary base. BoJ governor Haruhiko Kuroda described the measures as a testament to the bank's "unwavering determination to end deflation." 

A sales tax hike on April 1 from 5 percent to 8 percent had taken its toll on growth in the previous two quarters, with the Abe administration consequently postponing a planned second sales tax rise to 10 percent until April 2017. The consumption tax rise is aimed at tackling Japan's public debt, the highest among developed countries. A corporate tax cut of 2.51 percent to 32.1 percent is planned for April, with further cuts to push the figure below 30 percent, as the government seeks to stimulate growth. In December, the government approved a ¥3.5 trillion ($29billion) stimulus package of subsidies for regional governments to support small businesses and consumers. 

At last month's World Economic Outlook briefing, experts from the IMF cast doubts regarding Japan's growth prospects for 2015, citing disappointing private domestic and foreign demand. "Potential growth in Japan is very, very low," said Olivier Blanchard, chief economist at the IMF. "The structural reforms which could help increase potential growth are not yet sufficient, we think, to have a substantial impact on the medium term and the future of Japan." The IMF revised its 2015 growth forecast for the Japanese economy down to 0.6 percent, while at the same time downgrading its forecast for the Eurozone to 1.2 percent, and the US up to 3.2 percent.  

However, speaking to the press on Monday, Akira Amari, Japan's minister for economic and fiscal policy, was optimistic about the figures, pointing to positive consumer sentiment. The Japanese Nikkei was also buoyed by the news, reaching 18,047.26 in Monday's morning trading session, up 0.66 percent from Friday, to reach its the highest point since July 2007.

 

Newsfeed
0
To participate in the discussion
log in or register
loader
Chats
Заголовок открываемого материала