Japan downgrades view of economy on sluggish consumer spending
The government also slashed its assessment on consumer spending for the first time in two years, saying a pickup seems to be “stalling”, underlining the challenge for the Bank of Japan as it looks to exit its ultra-easy policy this year.
The downbeat assessment comes after data last week showed Japan’s economy unexpectedly slipped into recession in the fourth quarter on weak domestic demand, losing its position as the world’s third-largest economy to Germany.
READ: Japan slips into recession, Germany now world’s third-biggest economy
“The economy is recovering moderately though it appears to be stalling recently”, the Cabinet Office said in its report on Wednesday. It was the first downgrade since November 2023.
Real wages falling
The lower assessment on consumer spending was due to a pause in recovery in service spending and a fall in spending on non-durable goods because of factors such as price hikes.
Article continues after this advertisementThe nation’s real wages fell for 21 straight months in December as inflation outpaced wage recovery and continued to weigh on household spending.
Article continues after this advertisementREAD: Japan’s Dec real wages, household spending fall again
The suspension of some auto production and shipments prompted the government to cut its view on industrial output for the first time since March 2023. It said while industrial output was expected to pick up “production activity fell recently”.
The production stoppage at Toyota Motor’s small-car unit Daihatsu over safety issues have dented the auto output. Toyota also suspended shipments of some models after finding irregularities in certification tests for diesel engines developed by affiliate Toyota Industries.
Capital spending plans
Recovery in capital spending also appears to be “stalling”, the report said, maintaining the same view from the previous month.
Firms’ capital spending plans were solid but their investment has not been realized partly due to labour shortage, an official at the Cabinet Office said.
The government repeated it needed to pay “full attention” to an impact from the earthquake that killed about 240 in Japan’s Noto peninsula on New Year’s Day. Analysts have said the earthquake will have only a small impact on the economy in the short term.