Japan: Recession


Econintersect: Japan has entered its second recession in three years, its fourth in the last six years and its fifth of the 21st century. GDP contracted by 0.4% in the third quarter (-1.6% annual rate), following a decline of 1.9% in the preceding quarter (-7.3% annual rate). Reuters had reported an expectation for a gain of 0.5% (2.1% annual rate). The Tokyo stock market reacted with a big sell-off, the Nikkei 225 Index down 3% at last report.  It is considered likely that there will be a “snap” election called which could cost Prime Minister Shinzo Abe some support in parliament. Some suggest that Abe may actually have a stronger hand to be more aggressively with fiscal easing because of the setback. That will depend on how much support his party loses in the elections.

The following three graphics from Trading Economics (two annotated byEconintersect) show three time-period views of japan’s GDP data. The latest two quarters of contraction are the first two following the increase of Japan’s consumption tax from 5% to 8% on 01 April this year. Econintersect suggests that one can make strong monetary expansion moves but take the expansion away with ill-advised fiscal policy. See GEI News report on that conflict from July 2013.

Looking at annual data (calendar years) Japan experienced two+ years of expansion after reaching recovery from the 14-year depression (1996-2010) but has been contracting again 2014. Only a strong fourth quarter can avoid at least a hiatus in the expansion started in 2011. Some analysts are expecting a stronger fourth quarter, but are these the same ones who expected the third to be positive?

Reviews

  • Total Score 0%
User rating: 0.00% ( 0
votes )



Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *