The Borneo Post

Japan inflation ticks up, weak spending weighs

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TOKYO: Japanese consumer prices rose in March, data showed yesterday, but a drop in factory output and still-weak household spending underscore­d the challenges facing policymake­rs as they battle on-and-off deflation.

The figures came a day after Japan’s central bank modestly boosted its economic growth forecast, even as its chief warned an inflation target – already running four years late – was likely to be delayed once again.

Consumer prices rose in March for the third straight month on the back of higher energy costs, data from the internal affairs ministry showed.

After stripping out the volatile cost of fresh food, nationwide consumer prices increased 0.2 per cent from a year earlier.

“Inflation is expected to rise for now thanks to the recovery in energy prices, but those gains are likely to be very limited,” Japan Research Institute economist Yusuke Shimoda said.

“Japan’s economy is growing but people are keeping a tight hold on the purse strings.”

Separate data showed household spending fell 1.3 per cent in March from a year ago – the 13th consecutiv­e monthly drop – and output at the nation’s factories shrank by 2.1 per cent.

While Japan’s job market is tight – the unemployme­nt rate was at 2.8 per cent in March – individual spending, which accounts for more than half of the country’s GDP, has remained in the deep freeze.

This month the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund raised its growth forecast for Japan’s economy this year and next, citing a pickup in exports, but warned that a shrinking labour force and below-forecast inflation would curb longer-term expansion.

The Bank of Japan’s most recent business confidence survey showed that firms were more upbeat.

But with cash-rich companies not splashing out on big pay rises, analysts are doubtful about a significan­t improvemen­t in consumer spending anytime soon.

“The employment situation is definitely strong, while wage and income growth are still quite depressed,” Takashi Miwa, chief economist at Nomura Securities in Tokyo, told Bloomberg.

“This is why consumptio­n demand is still quite weak.”

Prime Minister Shinzo Abe swept to power in late 2012 on a pledge to cement a lasting recovery through a growth plan dubbed Abenomics.

The scheme – a mix of aggressive monetary easing and huge government spending along with reforms to the economy – stoked a stock market rally as it weakened the yen and fattened corporate profits.

But its effect on the wider economy has been less dramatic, with promised reforms slow in coming. — AFP

Inflation is expected to rise for now thanks to the recovery in energy prices, but those gains are likely to be very limited. Yusuke Shimoda, Japan Research Institute economist

 ??  ?? A woman buys fruit at a store in Tokyo. Japanese consumer prices rose in March, data showed on April 28, but a drop in factory output and still-weak household spending underscore­d the challenges facing policymake­rs as they battle on-and-off deflation....
A woman buys fruit at a store in Tokyo. Japanese consumer prices rose in March, data showed on April 28, but a drop in factory output and still-weak household spending underscore­d the challenges facing policymake­rs as they battle on-and-off deflation....
 ??  ?? Graymatics employees pretend to fight as they record footage to be used to ‘train’ their software to watch and filter Internet videos for violence, at their office in Singapore. — Reuters photo
Graymatics employees pretend to fight as they record footage to be used to ‘train’ their software to watch and filter Internet videos for violence, at their office in Singapore. — Reuters photo

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