New Straits Times

LONGEST EXPANSION IN DECADE FOR JAPAN

Growth driven by robust domestic demand, capital spending

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JAPAN has posted its longest economic expansion in over a decade on the back of a pickup in household and company spending, data showed yesterday.

The country’s gross domestic product (GDP) grew by one per cent in the April-June period, marking the sixth straight winning quarter in the longest string of gains since 2006.

The world’s No. 3 economy has been picking up steam, mainly on the back of surging exports, including smartphone­s parts and memory chips, with investment­s linked to the Tokyo 2020 Olympics also giving growth a boost.

But the latest GDP figures — which translate to a whopping four per cent annualised growth rate — were driven by robust domestic demand and capital spending, which offset a quarterly decline in exports.

Private consumptio­n picked up 0.9 per cent in the second quarter. Individual spending accounts for more than a half of Japan’s GDP.

The second-quarter growth blew past market expectatio­ns for a 0.6 per cent rise, according to figures from the Cabinet Office. It was well up from a 0.4 per cent expansion in the JanuaryMar­ch GDP.

The labour market is tight and business confidence is high, but efforts to lift inflation have fallen flat despite years of aggressive monetary easing by Japan’s central bank.

The latest reading nonetheles­s means Japan’s economy has had its best string of gains since the tenure of popular former prime minister Junichiro Koizumi.

Yesterday’s figures are good news for Prime Minister Shinzo Abe. A string of short-term leaders followed Abe’s first term before he swept back to power in late 2012 on a pledge to reignite Japan’s once-booming economy with a plan dubbed Abenomics.

The scheme — a mix of huge monetary easing, government spending and reforms to the economy — stoked a stock market rally and fattened corporate profits.

In a commentary, Barclays said: “The strength of private consumptio­n reflects an improvemen­t in employment and income conditions (e.g. drop in unemployme­nt, four consecutiv­e years of increasing base pay), but likely also such factors as favourable weather during that period.”

Still, wages have not been rising enough to kick start tepid inflation, and few analysts expect the same kind of growth next quarter.

“Japan’s structural problems have not changed: ageing population, decreasing working age population, deteriorat­ing fiscal conditions,” said Junko Nishioka, chief economist of Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corp.

Japan has been struggling to defeat years of deflation and slow growth that followed the collapse of an equity and property market bubble in the early nineties.

The Bank of Japan, aiming to create two-per cent inflation as a key part of Tokyo’s growth bid, now expects to reach that goal by sometime in the year to March 2020 — four years later than planned. AFP

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