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Japan's economy shrinks at fastest pace in six years, virus clouds outlook

Leika Kihara, Daniel Leussink (Reuters)
Tokyo, Japan
Mon, February 17, 2020

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Japan's economy shrinks at fastest pace in six years, virus clouds outlook A stevedore walks between shipping containers at a port in Tokyo. (Reuters/Issei Kato)

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apan’s economy shrank at the fastest pace in six years in the December quarter as a sales tax hike and soft global demand hurt consumption and capital expenditure, keeping policymakers under pressure to prop up growth with additional stimulus.

The hit to the world’s third-largest economy comes amid fresh concerns about weakness in the current quarter, as the coronavirus damages output and tourism, stoking fears Japan may be on the cusp of a recession - defined as two straight quarters of decline.

Gross domestic product (GDP) fell an annualized 6.3 percent in the October-December period, faster than a median market forecast for a 3.7 percent contraction, data released by the government showed on Monday.

The drop, which followed a revised 0.5 percent gain in July-September, was the biggest since a 7.4 percent decline marked in April-June 2014.

The contraction translated into a 1.6 percent quarter-on-quarter decline, against a median forecast for a 0.9 percent fall.

Private consumption, which makes up more than half of the economy, dropped 2.9 percent, as households curbed spending after a sales tax hike in October last year. That compared with market forecasts for a 2 percent drop.

Capital expenditure fell 3.7 percent in the fourth quarter, bigger than a median forecast for a 1.6 percent drop.

External demand - or exports minus imports - contributed 0.5 percentage point to GDP growth, while domestic demand knocked 2.1 points off growth.

Japanese policymakers had warned that the economy will suffer a contraction in October-December as the sales tax hike, typhoons and the Sino-US trade hurt consumption and factory output.

Investors are now watching to see if growth will rebound in the current quarter as the Bank of Japan projects, amid fresh risks from the coronavirus that have forced factories in China to shut down and led to a sharp drop in Chinese tourists.

The BOJ kept monetary policy steady last month and nudged up its economic growth forecasts on hopes that global growth will rebound around mid-year due to receding risks.

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