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Reuters: Japan’s economy shrank a bigger-than-expected 0.6 percent in October-December, hurt by slowing global growth, Thai floods and a strong yen, casting doubt about expectations that growth will resume this quarter as Europe’s debt crisis clouds the outlook.
Domestic demand also weakened in a worrying sign that the economic boost from rebuilding the country’s earthquake-devestated northeast coast is slow to materialise.
Japan’s fourth contraction in five quarters pushed economic output for the whole of 2011 down 0.9 percent, marking the first calendar year contraction since the global financial crisis in 2009.
The weak reading could add to mounting political pressures on the Bank of Japan to ease policy further to shore up the world’s third-largest economy with policymakers grappling with persistent deflation and a strong yen.
The gross domestic product data came hours before the central bank kicks off its two-day policy meeting at which it may decide it needs to act by weighing further easing or setting a more specific inflation goal.
The contraction came just as the economy was recuperating from a slump caused by last year’s earthquake and tsunami that devastated the northeast coastal areas in March and triggered the world’s worst nuclear disaster since Chernobyl in 1986.
It compared with economists’ median forecast for a drop of 0.3 percent and followed a revised 1.7 percent expansion registered in July-September, which was the first rise in GDP in four quarters. On an annualised basis, the economy shrank 2.3 percent, against a 1.4 percent contraction expected, data from the Cabinet Office showed. That also compares with an annualised expansion of 2.8 percent in the United States in the same quarter.
“The contraction was largely caused by a slump in exports, and the economy is likely to remain in a soft patch through the first half of this year as exports struggle, capital spending slows and implementation of public works is delayed,” said Yoshiki Shinke, senior economist at Dai-Ichi Life Research Institute.
“The BOJ is likely to stand pat on monetary policy for the time being barring a sudden rise in the yen, as it has already taken into account the economy’s underlying weakness.”
The yen was trading at around 77.70 to the dollar on Monday, comfortably below its record highs after Greek parliament’s approval of an austerity package on Sunday propped up the euro.
Domestic demand contributed 0.1 percentage point to GDP in the fourth quarter, less than a 0.9 percentage point contribution in the third quarter. Net exports shaved 0.6 percentage point off GDP in October-December, due to slackening global demand and the supply-chain disruption caused by Thai floods, illustrating the plight of an export-reliant economy.
Personal consumption, which accounts for roughly 60 percent of GDP, rose 0.3 percent, compared with a 0.9 percent rise expected, and up for the third consecutive quarter.
Still, Europe’s sovereign debt crisis and a persistently strong yen cloud the outlook. Japan spent a record 8 trillion yen in unilateral intervention on October 31, and another 1 trillion yen in early November on undeclared forays into the currency market. Pressure is mounting on the BOJ to respond with action to the Fed’s historic step of setting an inflation target and its extended commitment to near-zero rates.
A policy decision by the BOJ on Tuesday will be a close call, with some central bankers still reluctant to use their limited policy options and they see no clear justification to act now with the yen off its record highs.