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Japan's economy falls back into recession again

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Japan July-Sept GDP shrinks 0.2%, second straight quarterly fall
By Hiroshi Hiyama

Japan's economy slipped into recession for the second time since Prime Minister Shinzo Abe came to power nearly three years ago on a vow to revive growth and end chronic deflation, government figures showed Monday.

The result marks a fresh blow to the prime minister's eponymous "Abenomics" policy blitz of fiscal spending and aggressive monetary policy easing aimed at reviving the world's third-largest economy.

Japan's economy, once Asia's biggest, has been overtaken by giant neighbour China in size, while the smaller country struggles with a challenging demographic outlook that is expected to see its population shrink by the tens of millions in coming decades.

Still, it boasts some of the world's biggest companies and banks and its domestic technology plays a key role in a wide array of global industries, including automobiles, electronics and machinery.

The Cabinet Office announced that Japan's gross domestic product (GDP) shrank 0.2 percent in the July-September period, or an annualised contraction of 0.8 percent, marking the second straight quarterly decline.

Economists consider two straight quarters of GDP contraction as marking a technical recession.

The figure, which is preliminary, was marginally worse than the market expectation for a 0.1 percent decline, according to a Bloomberg News survey, and followed a similar shrinkage in the previous quarter.

The data are likely to provide fresh fodder for the Bank of Japan, the central bank, which has embarked on an aggressive bond-buying programme aimed at ending deflation and boosting growth.

The BoJ is scheduled to hold a policy meeting this week with attention focused on whether it will expand its monetary easing.

The latest data offer a relatively fuzzy snapshot of Japan's economy, characterised by improving consumption but weakening corporate investment due to uncertainty over the Chinese and other foreign economies, experts said.

"The real economy is at a standstill, even though other aspects of 'Abenomics' -- corporate earnings and stock prices -- are improving," Taro Saito, director of economic research at NLI Research Institute, told AFP.

"Companies are reluctant to invest despite their sound profits," he said, adding that while consumer spending improved "its overall trend still remains weak".

Still, analysts broadly expect the economy to pick up in coming quarters, as Abe is seen preparing a fresh stimulus package to boost growth, though it will likely remain tepid.

"Details are not as bad as the figures might suggest," said Junichi Makino, economist at SMBC Nikko Securities, citing declines in inventories and increasing imports.

For technical reasons those results negatively affect GDP but can actually imply increasing demand.

Akira Amari, the government minister in charge of revitalising the economy, put a largely positive spin on the figures, saying in a statement that the "business climate is expected to recover gradually", citing rising wages as a bright factor.

Marcel Thieliant, economist at Capital Economics, said, however, that any recovery should be viewed with caution.

"Looking ahead, the economy should start to recover this quarter, but we think that growth in the current fiscal year will be closer to 0.5 percent rather than the 1.2 percent projected by the Bank of Japan at its end-October meeting," he wrote in a note to clients.

Thielient said that he expected the Bank of Japan to hold off for now but expand its easing programme in January.

Link 1: Japan July-Sept GDP shrinks 0.2%, second straight quarterly fall - Yahoo News

Link 2: Japan slips back into recession in July-Sept quarter ‹ Japan Today: Japan News and Discussion

@Nihonjin1051
 
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Japanese need to stop claiming Diayutai and throw out the ash of A class WWII criminal before China will help Japan out of recession.

Look at the cheapskate American politician. They incite Japan to go against China and yet offer no economic solution for allies. Only idiot like Japan will follow US instruction. Its a Lose-Lose deal.
 
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Japanese need to stop claiming Diayutai and throw out the ash of A class WWII criminal before China will help Japan out of recession.

Look at the cheapskate American politician. They incite Japan to go against China and yet offer no economic solution for allies. Only idiot like Japan will follow US instruction. Its a Lose-Lose deal.
Let worry about your China economic falling first before worry about Japan. Japan is industrialized, gdp per cap is $37k. Your Chinese is $8k and is slowing already.
 
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At least China master can feed her by opening it massive consumer market floodgate.

US wants Japan to be its dog while cant afford its meal :lol: Cheapskate.

Your mighty UK partners knows that at least CHina can paid for her meal :enjoy:

View attachment 272446

Is the UK Getting Dangerously Friendly with China? | The National Interest

Xi Jinping signs nuclear deal as UK and China clinch £40bn of contracts | World news | The Guardian

seems more like you want Japan to buy cheap Chinese stuff instead :D outsourcing Japanese jobs for Chinese products that's not good.

the problem with Japan is demographics and lack of natural resources.

not even great China fortunes can fix that.
 
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seems more like you want Japan to buy cheap Chinese stuff instead :D outsourcing Japanese jobs for Chinese products that's not good.

the problem with Japan is demographics and lack of natural resources.

not even great China fortunes can fix that.

Self denying is bad for you.

China can fixed Japan economy. But she must please mighty China first. UK is a great example. :enjoy:
 
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Self denying is bad for you.

China can fixed Japan economy. But she must please mighty China first. UK is a great example. :enjoy:


can you teach a old dog new tricks though??
 
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Japan's economy falls back into recession again - BBC News

Japan's economy has fallen into recession again after it shrank 0.8% on an annualised basis in the third quarter.

The preliminary data means the world's third-largest economy has contracted for a second consecutive quarter, marking a technical recession.

Growth was expected to decline after it fell a revised 0.7% in the second quarter on weak domestic demand.

Japan has been in recession four times since the global financial crisis.

On a quarterly basis, growth fell 0.2% in the third quarter from the previous one, weaker than forecasts of a 0.1% decline.

The seasonally adjusted figure was also much lower than expectations of a 0.2% drop.

Economists said the weak data will put more pressure on the government and central bank to continue to stimulate the economy.

However, Marcel Thieliant, economist at research firm Capital Economics, said policymakers have showed "considerable reluctance" to respond to weaker growth with more stimulus as inflation accelerates, and he does not expect more easing at the central's meeting this week.

"The upshot is that the Bank's preferred inflation measure, which excludes prices of fresh food and energy, should start to moderate soon," he said in a note.

"We therefore remain convinced that more stimulus will eventually be needed, and now believe that the January meeting is the most likely venue for its announcement."

Business spending falls
Japanese companies continue to be wary of using their record profits to raise wages and invest in the economy - a major challenge for Prime Minister's Shinzo Abe's "Abenomics" policies.

Business spending fell 1.3%, against forecasts of a 0.4% decrease. It also marked the second quarter in a row of declines.

But, private consumption, which accounts for 60% of the economy rose 0.5% from the previous quarter.

Consumer spending has picked up from the hit it took last year from an increase in sales tax in April, which contributed to the recession in 2014.

Despite the declining growth, the government is positive that a recovery is underway.

"While there are risks such as overseas developments, we expect the economy to head toward a moderate recovery thanks to the effect of various (stimulus) steps taken so far," economics minister Akira Amari said in a statement.

But in reaction to the growth figures, the benchmark Nikkei 225 index was down 1.1% to 19,372.98 points in early trade in Tokyo.

@Nihonjin1051
 
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