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BOJ on hold
The rebound from recession, however, will allow the Bank of Japan to hold off on expanding monetary stimulus for now even as slumping oil prices push inflation further away from its 2% target, analysts say.
“The BOJ is expected to keep monetary policy unchanged for a while to see the impact from the latest easing,” said Taro Saito, director of economic research at NLI Research Institute.
The data will be one of the key factors the BOJ will scrutinise at its two-day rate review ending on Wednesday, where it is widely set to maintain the current pace of asset purchases in its monetary stimulus program.
Private consumption, which makes up about 60% of the economy, rose 0.3% in the final quarter, less than a median market forecast for a 0.7% increase.
Capital expenditure also rose just 0.1% after two straight quarters of declines, suggesting the BOJ’s aggressive money printing has yet to nudge firms into boosting investment.
In a glimmer of hope, external demand added 0.2 percentage point to growth on robust shipments to the United States and China, Japan’s two biggest export destinations.
One of the biggest headwinds for Japan is a deteriorating global economic outlook, which has triggered a wave of monetary easings around the world to fight of deflationary pressures and prop up growth.
But Japanese policymakers are hoping a rebound in exports, which had been a soft spot in the economy despite support from a weak yen, and lower fuel costs will encourage firms to spend more on wages and expenditure.
“The economy will recover backed by firm domestic demand as Japan’s terms of trade improves on oil price falls,” Amari said.
Japan’s economy slid into recession in July-September last year, prompting Abe to delay a second sales tax hike initially scheduled in October 2015.
The slump slowed Japan’s quest to beat off nearly two decades of grinding deflation, and forced the BOJ into expanding monetary stimulus in October last year.