Bangkok Post

Japan’s GDP growth in Q3 revised downward

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TOKYO: Japan’s economy grew 1.3% in July to September from a year earlier, according to revised data reflecting weaker business investment and exports.

It was the third-straight quarter of expansion, but well below forecasts by most economists of an upward revision. The preliminar­y estimate put annual growth at 2.2% in the last quarter.

Quarterly growth for the world’s thirdlarge­st economy was 0.3%, down from the earlier reported 0.5%.

Japan has yet to attain the strong momentum Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has been promising since he took office four years ago, pledging to spur investment by rekindling inflation.

So far, his strategy has rested heavily on massive asset purchases by the central bank. The country remains far from the 2% inflation target set in early 2013.

The downgrade reflects a 0.4% drop in business investment from the previous quarter. Originally it was reported as flat. Exports grew 1.6%, below the 2.0% earlier figure.

The latest data come amid mixed signals: China yesterday reported a rebound in trade that could auger well for Japan’s exports, since it supplies many of the materials and components used by Chinese manufactur­ers.

But the election of Donald Trump as president has raised uncertaint­y over the future course of the US economy and over Japan’s trade outlook.

For now, economists say that the recent, sustained expansion and a weakening of the yen versus the dollar are good signs.

“That means the central bank is likely to keep its current lavish monetary easing policy intact at a policy meeting later this month, without pushing interest rates further into negative territory,’’ said Marcel Thieliant of Capital Economics. “Firms’ prediction­s for industrial production suggest that the economy continued to expand at a solid pace in the current quarter. Our forecast is that GDP will grow by 1% next year.’’

Also yesterday, the government revised annual estimates of gross domestic product for 1994-2015, raising figures across the board based on a 2011 benchmark year.

The revision put Japan’s GDP in 2015 at 530.5 trillion yen ($4.66 trillion), up from the earlier figure of 499.3 trillion yen.

The newest data reflect a new calculatio­n method based on revised internatio­nal standards. It includes research and developmen­t costs, patent royalties and purchases of defense equipment that previously were not part of the calculatio­ns.

The United States, Australia and many European countries have been using the new method for years.

“The revised figures do not reflect any actual change in Japan’s sluggish economic reality, since they boost the overall GDP figure they are a ‘substantia­l windfall’ from a political point of view,’’ Masamichi Adachi of JPMorgan said in a research note.

The higher number pushes Japan closer toward Abe’s goal of attaining a 600 trillion yen ($5.3 trillion) nominal GDP. It also improves Japan’s gross debt-to-GDP ratio, which at more than twice the size of the economy is the biggest among major industrial countries.

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