Business World

Japan’s trade gap widens, import costs surge on supply pressures

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TOKYO — Japan’s exports extended double-digit gains for a third straight month in April, but surging global commodity costs inflated the country’s import bill to a record, adding to worries about the rising cost of living.

Shoring up the prospects of a private demand-led recovery, however, was a gauge of capital expenditur­e that posted its first monthly gain in three months.

The mixed data on Thursday followed the yen’s falls to twodecade-lows against the dollar earlier this month, which stoked fears of worsening terms of trade and added financial burdens for the resource-poor Japanese economy as import costs soar.

A weak yen, once considered a boon for the export-led economy, now has less of an impact as shipments grow smaller due to the ongoing shift by Japanese manufactur­ers to offshore production.

Japan’s exports rose 12.5% in April from a year earlier, Ministry of Finance data showed, led by US-bound shipments of cars, slightly missing a 13.8% increase expected by economists in a Reuters poll. It followed a 14.7% rise in March.

In a worrying sign for the outlook, China-bound shipments fell 5.9% in April, the biggest drop since March 2020, as heavy coronaviru­s disease 2019 (COVID-19) curbs in major cities like Shanghai disrupted supply-chains and paralysed economic activity. Imports from China — Japan’s largest trading partner — also fell the most since September 2020.

“Import gains caused by rising crude oil prices and a weak yen mean a transfer of national wealth to oil-producing nations, depriving Japan of purchasing power,” said Takeshi Minami, chief economist at Norinchuki­n Research Institute.

“As such, Japan’s economic recovery depends on coronaviru­s developmen­ts at home and China as the lockdown in Shanghai has disrupted supply-side and consumer activity.”

Imports rose 28.2% in the year to April, versus the median estimate for a 35.0% increase, as the weaker yen lifted already surging global commodity prices. Imports hit a record ¥8.9 trillion ($69.27 billion), topping exports worth ¥8 trillion.

That resulted in a trade deficit of ¥839.2 billion, narrower than the median estimate for a ¥1.150 trillion shortfall but posting a ninth straight month in the red.

Analysts have warned of risks of prolonged cost-push inflation to the fragile economy with external factors, not domestic demand, pushing import bills higher.

“If the zero-COVID-19 policies are extended it will have a really harsh impact,” said Taro Saito, executive research fellow at NLI Research Institute, adding that Chinabound shipments account for more than a fifth of Japan’s exports.

Separate data on Thursday showed Japan’s core machinery orders rose 7.1% in March from the previous month, versus a 3.7% increase expected by economists in a Reuters poll.

The volatile data series, regarded as a leading gauge of capital expenditur­e in the coming six to nine months, provided a glimmer of hope for a domestic demand-led recovery.

Japan’s economy shrank in the first quarter as COVID-19 curbs hit the service sector and surging commodity prices created new pressures. —

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