Gulf News

Japanese data signal slow recovery

Central bank will not adjust policy based only on crude prices, which fell December, January

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Japanese factories churned out more machinery and electronic devices in January as export shipments rose, but lower energy costs due to cheaper crude oil failed to provide a boost to consumer spending.

Weak retail sales and a cooling of already slow inflation underscore­d the fragility of the recovery of the world’s third-largest economy. It also raised the potential for further monetary stimulus from the central bank.

Core inflation, excluding volatile food prices, was 2.2 per cent, compared with 2.5 per cent the month before and the lowest in 10 months. Excluding energy costs and food, the consumer price index rose 2.1 per cent, level with the previous two months.

The inflation rate is overstated by a 3 percentage point increase in the national sales tax, to 8 per cent from 5 per cent, last April. The tax hike snatched the wind from the sails of the recovery Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has sought to nurture by massive monetary and fiscal stimulus.

Excluding the effect from the sales tax, the inflation rate was only 0.2 per cent, Bank of Japan Gov. Haruhiko Kuroda said in a speech Friday.

The central bank is pumping trillions of yen (tens of billions of dollars) a month into the economy, seeking to vanquish deflation that discourage­d investment and spending over the past two decades, aiming at an inflation rate of 2 per cent.

Kuroda, the central bank governor, likened the 2 per cent target to the velocity needed for a spaceship to escape the earth’s gravitatio­nal pull. “Reaching orbit at an altitude of 1 per cent ... is not enough,” he said. “This is because satellites at low altitude can be pulled back by gravity.”

But he said the central bank would not adjust its policy based just on crude oil prices, which fell about 60 per cent between December and January but have since recovered slightly.

The economy briefly fell back into recession after the sales tax hike but grew at a 2.2 per cent annualised rate in October-December, helped by a surge in exports of machinery and electronic­s components, whose output rose in January.

Manufactur­ing output rose 4 per cent from the month before, but was 2.6 per cent lower than a year earlier.

2.2 % inflation in January compared to 2.5% the month earlier.

 ?? Reuters ?? Fragile economy A retail store in Tokyo. Weak retail sales and a cooling of already slow inflation underscore­d the fragility of the recovery of the world’s third-largest economy.
Reuters Fragile economy A retail store in Tokyo. Weak retail sales and a cooling of already slow inflation underscore­d the fragility of the recovery of the world’s third-largest economy.

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