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After four solid quarters of growth, Japan's GDP turned negative in the last three months of 2010 due to weaker exports and consumer demand. The downturn was expected to be temporary. Instead, Japan has now recorded consecutive quarters of contraction for the first time since the global financial crisis. GDP fell for four straight quarters starting April 2008. Japan's economy and fiscal policy minister Kaoru Yosano described the current slump as milder than the previous slide, when global demand "evaporated instantly." "The Japanese economy's ability to rebound is sufficiently strong," Yosano said, according to Kyodo News agency. Goldman Sachs said the economy will likely bottom in the second quarter. It expects GDP to begin growing again in the third quarter as reconstruction bolsters demand in both the private and public sectors. "We assume the production and exports will shift to mild growth facilitated by supply chain restoration, although power supply is an uncertain factor," chief Japan economist Naohiko Baba said in a report to clients. The first-quarter GDP figure translates to a 0.9 percent fall from the previous three month period, according to the Cabinet Office data. Consumer spending, which accounts for some 60 percent of the economy, declined 0.6 percent. Capital investments by companies retreated 0.9 percent from the October-December quarter. To fund recovery spending, Japan's parliament passed at 4 trillion yen ($49 billion) budget supplement earlier this month. Further government outlays are expected to follow in the months ahead. The money will be used to build new houses for the more than 100,000 people who remain without proper shelter, clear debris and rubble, restore fishing grounds, and provide support for disaster-hit businesses and their employers.
[Associated
Press;
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