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"Our economy is stalling as output is weakening," said Banri Kaieda in a written statement, according to Kyodo. Goldman Sachs has said it expects growth to "contract significantly" in the fourth quarter. Barclays Capital expect the economy to contract in October-December for the first time in five quarters. Worried about looming threats, Prime Minister Naoto Kan's Cabinet approved last month $63 billion in new stimulus spending. The package, which includes financial support for small businesses and local economies, will help lift GDP by 0.6 percentage points, the government estimates. Playing host to a Pacific Rim economic summit last weekend, Kan declared his country must open up its markets and embrace free trade
-- or risk getting left further behind its regional rivals. "Other Asian economies are catching up to or surpassing Japan," Kan said Sunday at a press conference that wound up the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum in Yokohama. Tokyo has pledged to wrap up free trade negotiations with Australia, resume suspended trade talks with South Korea and seek new free trade partners, warning the country needed to become a more attractive place to invest. On Sunday, Japan signed a free trade deal with Peru. The government has also pressed Japan's central bank to do more to fight deflation and spark life into the economy. It cut interest rates to virtually zero last month and introduced a 5 trillion yen ($61 billion) program to buy Japanese government bonds and other assets in an effort to spur lending. Kyohei Morita, chief economist at Barclays Capital Japan, isn't impressed with the government's track record so far and says he does not "expect much" from its latest stimulus package. Moreover, monetary policies by the central bank generally take one to two years to actually lift growth. "On balance, we believe government action is the best solution but see continued pressure on the BOJ as the most likely approach," Morita said in a note to clients.
[Associated
Press;
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