Kuwait Times

Japan economy grows faster than expected on new-era holidays

-

TOKYO: Japan’s economy grew at a fasterthan-expected clip in the second quarter, official data showed on Friday, helped by celebratio­ns to usher in a new imperial era. Gross domestic product (GDP) in the world’s third-biggest economy grew 0.4 percent from the previous quarter, the Cabinet Office said, beating analysts’ median forecast of 0.1 percent.

The third straight period of expansion will also bolster Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s determinat­ion to push through a controvers­ial sales tax hike in October despite warnings it could weigh on growth.

Shoppers are rushing to make purchases before the rate rises from eight percent to 10 percent on October 1 and this boost for consumptio­n also helped push GDP higher, economists said. An unpreceden­ted 10-day holiday for the enthroneme­nt of Emperor Naruhito, which kicked off a new imperial era in Japan, also pepped up the figures, according to analysts.

However, global trade frictions weighed on exports and corporate spending in some sectors such as machinery, said Yuichiro Nagai, senior economist at Mizuho Securities. “But investment­s in software, research and developmen­t, and constructi­on were good,” he said. Nagai said a rush by consumers to buy before the sales tax hike will likely become even more pronounced in the July-September quarter, helping Japan log another quarter of growth.

And while the economy would likely contract in October-December due to the higher tax, it should rebound next year and avoid slipping into a recession, Nagai said. “There is uncertaint­y over where the trade war will go... With the US presidenti­al election coming next year, however, I believe the main scenario is that they will find a compromise plan” later this year, he said.

‘Additional monetary easing’

The last time Japan hiked its sales tax, in 2014, the result was a slump in consumptio­n and the wider economy and some economists have warned that now is not the time to raise the rate amid uncertaint­y over global trade and Brexit. But Tokyo has vowed to go through with the plan unless there is a crisis on the level of the 2008 financial meltdown and Abe has promised countermea­sures to cushion the blow on the economy. SMBC Nikko Securities chief market economist Yoshimasa Maruyama said the Japanese economy would likely expand further in the July-September period but warned it could slide into a mild recession in OctoberDec­ember as the global economy slows.

“By the time autumn comes, debates for a supplement­ary budget will start and calls for additional monetary easing will get louder,” he said in a report released ahead of the GDP announceme­nt.

But Naoya Oshikubo, senior economist at Sumitomo Mitsui Trust Asset Management, was not so gloomy. “Going forward, central banks are expected to continue easing, and the Chinese government will likely announce fiscal measures, resulting in a global economic recovery, which should help Japan maintain its momentum,” Oshikubo said in a report.

Besides the planned tax hike, the impact from trade frictions between Japan and South Korea could be a headwind, he said. “But both should be limited in their effects,” he said as the affected goods make up only a fraction of Japanese exports.

 ?? AFP ?? SEOUL: This file photo shows South Korean protestors cutting a banner with a picture of Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe during a rally denouncing Japan for its recent trade restrictio­ns against Seoul, near the Japanese embassy in Seoul.—
AFP SEOUL: This file photo shows South Korean protestors cutting a banner with a picture of Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe during a rally denouncing Japan for its recent trade restrictio­ns against Seoul, near the Japanese embassy in Seoul.—

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait