Japan's economy skids, clouding BOJ's rate hike plans
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[May 16, 2024] By
Satoshi Sugiyama and Tetsushi Kajimoto
TOKYO (Reuters) -Japan's economy fell faster than expected in the first
quarter as the weak yen continued to batter consumers, throwing a fresh
challenge to the central bank's push to get interest rates further away
from near zero.
Preliminary gross domestic product (GDP) data from the Cabinet Office on
Thursday showed Japan's economy shrank 2.0% annualized in January-March
from the prior quarter, faster than the 1.5% drop seen in a Reuters poll
of economists.
Downwardly revised data showed GDP barely grew in the fourth quarter of
2023, due to downgrades to capital expenditure estimates.
While preliminary capital spending data is often subject to heavy
revisions in the final release, the across-the-board declines in all GDP
components suggest Japan's economy had no major growth engine in the
first quarter.
That could create some hesitation for the Bank of Japan, which raised
interest rates in March for the first time since 2007 and has since
signaled its intention to continue tightening policy.
"It would be possible that the timing of rate hikes could be pushed back
depending on how the GDP may rebound in the current quarter," said
Yoshimasa Maruyama, chief market economist at SMBC Nikko Securities.
He said while the economy would certainly rebound in the current quarter
due to rising wages, uncertainty remains around consumption in the
service sector.
The latest GDP reading translates into a quarterly contraction of 0.5%,
versus a 0.4% decline expected by economists. Revised first quarter
figures will be released on June 10.
The weak yen has created a two-speed economy in Japan, with the export
and tourism sectors broadly benefiting from a more competitive exchange
rate but households and small businesses squeezed by inflated costs of
imported goods.
Toru Suehiro, chief economist at Daiwa Securities, said the yen's
weakness complicates the question of whether the BOJ should maintain its
monetary stimulus or continue to unwind it.
"The adverse effects of a weaker yen are becoming a cause for concern so
one can argue that interest rates should be raised," Suehiro said.
"Although real wages are likely to turn slightly positive in the second
half of this year, the level of real wages will not rise sharply as the
yen continues to weaken."
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People enjoy drinks and food at izakaya pub restaurants at the
Ameyoko shopping district, in Tokyo, Japan February 15, 2024.
REUTERS/Issei Kato/File photo
REAL WAGE PAIN
Japan's large businesses delivered the biggest wage hikes in three
decades this year, which the BOJ says provided the conditions needed
to finally end decades of radical monetary stimulus.
However, thrifty households have since tightened their purse strings
as price hikes outpaced wage gains, squeezing real incomes and
diminishing their purchasing power.
Private consumption, which accounts for more than half of the
Japanese economy, fell 0.7%, bigger than the forecast 0.2% drop. It
was the fourth straight quarter of decline, the longest streak since
2009.
Economists are hopeful the first quarter weakness will prove
temporary and expect the drag to growth from an earthquake in the
Noto area this year and the suspension of operations at Toyota's
Daihatsu unit to dissipate.
Still, sharp yen declines persist as a threat to the recovery as do
spikes in crude oil due to the Middle East crisis.
Capital spending, a key driver of private demand, fell 0.8% in the
first quarter, versus an expected decline of 0.7%, despite hefty
corporate earnings.
External demand, or exports minus imports, knocked 0.3 of a
percentage point off first quarter GDP estimates.
For now, policymakers are counting on the bumper pay hikes and
planned income tax cuts to spur flagging consumption and prevent a
shift back to deflation.
"Rate hikes or cuts in bond purchases can ease the pain of yen
weakening, which could pave the way for income gains to spill over
to consumption," said Maruyama. "If that doesn't happen, raising
rates would be difficult, particularly when consumption remains
weak."
(Reporting by Tetsushi Kajimoto, Satoshi Sugiyama and Kantaro
Komiya; Writing by Tetsushi Kajimoto; Editing by Sam Holmes)
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