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Monday, 14 February 2011
Japan eclipsed by China as No. 2 economy
Japan surrendered its 42-year ranking as the world’s second-biggest economy to China last year, after data on Monday showed a fourth-quarter contraction caused by weaker consumer spending and a strong yen.
Japan surrendered its 42-year ranking as the world’s second-biggest economy to China last year, after data on Monday showed a fourth-quarter contraction caused by weaker consumer spending and a strong yen.
While Japan was expected to fall behind a surging China in the year, the data underlined the weak state of a Japanese economy burdened by deflation, soft domestic demand and pressured by the industrialised world’s biggest debt.
“It is difficult for the deflation-plagued Japanese economy to achieve self-sustained growth,” said Naoki Murakami, chief economist at Monex Securities.
While China’s leap forward reflects a shift in economic power as the country transforms itself from poverty-hit communist state to global heavyweight, it highlights the need for Japan to re-energise its economy, analysts said.
Its post-war “economic miracle” put it at number two behind the United States for 42 years, but stagnation after its property bubble burst in the 1990s helped put booming China on course to supplant it this year.
However, Japan remains around 10 times richer on a per-capita basis, according to the International Monetary Fund.
Japan’s real gross domestic product slipped by an annualised 1.1 per cent in the October-December quarter as the expiration of auto subsidies hit car sales, a new tobacco tax sapped cigarette demand and a strong yen hurt exports.
While the first contraction in five quarters was not as severe as analyst expectations of a 2.4 per cent slide, according to a Dow Jones Newswires poll of economists, Japanese GDP data is subject to constant revision.
The economy grew 3.9 per cent last year, government data showed â its first annual growth in three years. But this was not enough to keep it ahead of surging China.
Nominal GDP of US$5.474 trillion last year put it behind China’s US$5.879 trillion, the data showed.
Despite Japan crawling out of a severe year-long recession in 2009, its recovery remains fragile with deflation, high public debt, weak domestic demand and a strong yen all concerns for policymakers.
Last month Standard & Poor’s cut Japan’s credit rating one notch to “AA-” from “AA”, saying the government lacked a “coherent strategy” to ease a debt running near 200 per cent of GDP, the highest of any developed nation.
Nearly a third of government spending is being swallowed up by a social security system catering to a rapidly greying society, Standard & Poor’s warned, with that ratio set to rise without reforms as Japan continues to age.
Prime Minister Naoto Kan’s centre-left government has prioritised social security reform and a tax system overhaul, but has seen his approval ratings tumble and the opposition has so far refused to begin talks on the issue.
Private consumption, accounting for about 60 per cent of Japan’s GDP, slid by 0.7 per cent on-quarter in Oct-Dec as subsidies for green car purchases expired and as cigarette sales were dented by Japan’s biggest ever tobacco tax hike.
Exports slipped in the quarter as the Japanese yen surged to 15-year highs against the dollar, making Japanese goods more expensive overseas and eroding repatriated profits.
But many analysts expect the economy to rebound in the January-March quarter as the rising tide of global recovery lifts Japan, amid a recent pick up in corporate spending and exports.
“The contraction will not last long,” said Murakami. “Companies’ manufacturing activities are recovering rapidly in January-March this year from their bottom in October last year.”
The government said Japan’s economy would be helped by recovery elsewhere and could reap the benefits of its huge neighbour China, the world’s number-one export market.
“We welcome, as a neighbouring nation, that China’s economy is advancing rapidly,” said Kaoru Yosano, minister for fiscal policy.
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Japan eclipsed by China as No. 2 economy
Agence France-Presse in Tokyo
14 February 2011
Japan surrendered its 42-year ranking as the world’s second-biggest economy to China last year, after data on Monday showed a fourth-quarter contraction caused by weaker consumer spending and a strong yen.
While Japan was expected to fall behind a surging China in the year, the data underlined the weak state of a Japanese economy burdened by deflation, soft domestic demand and pressured by the industrialised world’s biggest debt.
“It is difficult for the deflation-plagued Japanese economy to achieve self-sustained growth,” said Naoki Murakami, chief economist at Monex Securities.
While China’s leap forward reflects a shift in economic power as the country transforms itself from poverty-hit communist state to global heavyweight, it highlights the need for Japan to re-energise its economy, analysts said.
Its post-war “economic miracle” put it at number two behind the United States for 42 years, but stagnation after its property bubble burst in the 1990s helped put booming China on course to supplant it this year.
However, Japan remains around 10 times richer on a per-capita basis, according to the International Monetary Fund.
Japan’s real gross domestic product slipped by an annualised 1.1 per cent in the October-December quarter as the expiration of auto subsidies hit car sales, a new tobacco tax sapped cigarette demand and a strong yen hurt exports.
While the first contraction in five quarters was not as severe as analyst expectations of a 2.4 per cent slide, according to a Dow Jones Newswires poll of economists, Japanese GDP data is subject to constant revision.
The economy grew 3.9 per cent last year, government data showed â its first annual growth in three years. But this was not enough to keep it ahead of surging China.
Nominal GDP of US$5.474 trillion last year put it behind China’s US$5.879 trillion, the data showed.
Despite Japan crawling out of a severe year-long recession in 2009, its recovery remains fragile with deflation, high public debt, weak domestic demand and a strong yen all concerns for policymakers.
Last month Standard & Poor’s cut Japan’s credit rating one notch to “AA-” from “AA”, saying the government lacked a “coherent strategy” to ease a debt running near 200 per cent of GDP, the highest of any developed nation.
Nearly a third of government spending is being swallowed up by a social security system catering to a rapidly greying society, Standard & Poor’s warned, with that ratio set to rise without reforms as Japan continues to age.
Prime Minister Naoto Kan’s centre-left government has prioritised social security reform and a tax system overhaul, but has seen his approval ratings tumble and the opposition has so far refused to begin talks on the issue.
Private consumption, accounting for about 60 per cent of Japan’s GDP, slid by 0.7 per cent on-quarter in Oct-Dec as subsidies for green car purchases expired and as cigarette sales were dented by Japan’s biggest ever tobacco tax hike.
Exports slipped in the quarter as the Japanese yen surged to 15-year highs against the dollar, making Japanese goods more expensive overseas and eroding repatriated profits.
But many analysts expect the economy to rebound in the January-March quarter as the rising tide of global recovery lifts Japan, amid a recent pick up in corporate spending and exports.
“The contraction will not last long,” said Murakami. “Companies’ manufacturing activities are recovering rapidly in January-March this year from their bottom in October last year.”
The government said Japan’s economy would be helped by recovery elsewhere and could reap the benefits of its huge neighbour China, the world’s number-one export market.
“We welcome, as a neighbouring nation, that China’s economy is advancing rapidly,” said Kaoru Yosano, minister for fiscal policy.
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