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Monday's GDP revision actually showed lower consumer and residential spending, a weak point given the large role consumption plays in Japan's economy. Several other surveys also showed worrying signs, with consumer confidence sagging in August as income growth, employment and livelihood measures dipped. The Cabinet Office's "Economy Watchers" survey also unexpectedly weakened in August to its lowest level since January. "On balance, today's data indicate that the economy is entering a phase of slower growth," Capital Markets economists Marcel Thieliant and Julian Jessop said in a separate commentary. The revised GDP data did show a 3 percent increase in public investment, compared to the earlier estimate of a 1.8 percent increase. It also showed a slight increase in private, non-residential investment. Data on exports and imports remained unchanged. Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has made restoring growth a key priority, setting a 2 percent inflation target he says is needed to break Japan from deflation and get the economy back on track after more than 20 years of stagnation. The revision in private investment is an encouraging sign, but so far Japanese companies have not demonstrated a renewed confidence in the country's economic potential by investing heavily in the home market or raising wages.
[Associated
Press;
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