Business World

Japan upgrades Q2 GDP on stronger business spending

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TOKYO — Japan’s economy grew faster than the initially estimated in the April-June quarter, helped by solid capital expenditur­e, although a resurgence in coronaviru­s disease 2019 (COVID-19) is underminin­g service-sector consumptio­n and clouding the outlook.

Revised gross domestic product (GDP) data by the Cabinet Office released on Wednesday showed the economy grew an annualized 1.9% in April-June, beating economists’ median forecast for a 1.6% gain and the initial estimate of a 1.3% expansion.

It followed Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga’s announceme­nt last Friday that he was stepping down, paving the way for the Sept. 29 ruling party leadership race, in which contenders will outline their plans to revive the world’s thirdlarge­st economy.

The upward revision was caused by betterthan-initially-estimated business spending, as a brisk global economic recovery powered capital expenditur­e and factory output, which more than offset weak service-sector activity.

Still, Japan’s economic recovery remains fragile due to slow COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns and as pandemic restrictio­ns hamper private-sector activity, some analysts say.

“Japan’s recovery is lagging behind other advanced economies. As such, the economy’s fully-fledged recovery needs to wait at least until early next year,” said Takeshi Minami, chief economist at Norinchuki­n Research Institute.

However, global chip shortages may put a drag on Japanese car production and shipments while signs of China’s economic slowdown emerge as sources of concern.

“The 1.9% April-June growth was not enough to push back the nearly 4% dip in January-March — less than a half of it,” said Yoshiki Shinke, chief economist at Dai-ichi Life Research Institute. “On average, ‘stalling’ could be the main descriptio­n of Japan’s economy during the first half of 2021.”

The second-quarter GDP growth figures translated into quarter-on-quarter expansion of 0.5% in price-adjusted real terms, better than an initial reading of a 0.3% growth and the median estimate for a 0.4% gain.

The capital expenditur­e component of GDP grew 2.3% in the second quarter from JanuaryMar­ch, bigger than the median forecast for 2.0% growth and the preliminar­y 1.7% gain.

Private consumptio­n, which accounts for more than half of Japan’s GDP, grew 0.9% in April-June from the previous three months, up slightly from a preliminar­y estimate of a 0.8% gain.

Domestic demand contribute­d 0.8 percentage points to revised growth figures, while net exports — or exports minus imports — shaved 0.3 percentage point off the second-quarter growth.

The data came a day after a weaker-than-expected July household spending reading, which suggested the COVID-19 resurgence could have started hampering consumer activities even earlier in the current quarter. —

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