(AFP Photo /
Yoshikazu Tsuno)
Source: Russia Today
http://rt.com/business/news/japan-economy-debt-contraction-490/
While investors are focused on the eurozone crisis
Japan’s economy is showing signs of contraction as its GDP fell last quarter by
3.5%, the most since the earthquake and tsunami in early 2011, while exports
and consumer spending slumped.
The results fell below analysts’ expectations, which
predicted Japan’s GDP to decline 3.4 % in the Q3, according to a Bloomberg News
survey last week. It was expected to be the third technical recession since
2008.
“The GDP figures were grim," Japanese PM
Yoshihiko Noda told parliament after the data was released. Noda is preparing
for an election and has pledged to speed up government efforts to boost the
economy. Weaker results could undermine his efforts including a crucial plan to
raise the national sales tax from 2014 to boost revenues. The proposed measure
would be the first tax rise in more than a decade and is considered politically
controversial.
“Today’s bad economic numbers deliver unpleasant news for
Noda,” Hiroshi Shiraishi, senior economist at BNP Paribas SA in Tokyo, told
Bloomberg. “It will take a while for Japan to get back to a sound recovery,
considering a modest pick-up in the global economy at best and the country’s
damaged relationship with China.”
Japan suffered the worst September trade result in more
than 30 years amid the territorial row with China. The long running dispute
re-emerged after the Noda administration’s bought a group of islands that China
also claims. Exports to China – Japan’s biggest trading partner – sank 14% from
a year earlier to 953.4 billion yen ($12.2 billion). Meanwhile the spreading
crisis in Europe also hurt Japanese exports.
Weaker exports have hit Japanese corporate majors such as
Sharp, Panasonic, and Nissan, which heavily rely on foreign trade. Panasonic
forecast a $9.5bln loss this year, 30 times bigger than analyst estimates,
while Hitachi Construction Machinery Co. and Nissan Motor Co. cut their full-
year profit forecasts and cosmetics major Shiseido Co. plans spending cuts.
At the end of October the Bank of Japan expanded its
asset-purchase program by 11 trillion yen ($137bln) to 91 trillion yen for the
second time in two months. With the new weak figures the BoJ is likely to
continue its supporting policy under political pressure, experts believe.
High debt burden is another problem of the Japanese
economy. Earlier this year the US-based Fitch rating agency cut Japan's
Long-Term Foreign and Local Currency Issuer Default Ratings (IDRs) to 'A+' from
'AA' and 'AA-' respectively. The move reflects “growing risks for Japan's
sovereign credit profile as a result of high and rising public debt ratios,”
according to Andrew Colquhoun, Head of Asia-Pacific Sovereigns at Fitch.
Japan's general government debt is expected to hit 239%
of GDP by the end of 2012, compared to the average 39% for OECD economies and
8% for 'A' –rated economies. Even Greece has a debt of 178% of GDP. This debt
ratio has risen by 61% since the global financial crisis broke out.
However, Fitch considers that broader private sector
savings, official foreign reserves worth $1.3 trillion and the fact that the
Japanese yen is a global reserve currency will help the country’s economy to
stay firm.
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