April 20, 2024

Household Spending in Japan Soars at Fastest Pace in 9 Years.

TOKYO (Reuters) — Japan’s household spending surged in March at the fastest pace in nine years in a sign that Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s bold efforts to end two decades of stagnation are lifting consumer confidence and setting the stage for an economic revival.

Household spending soared 5.2 percent in March from a year earlier in price-adjusted terms, the Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications said on Tuesday, as some individual investors cashed in on stock gains to increase spending on cars and home repairs.

The figure far exceeded the median estimate for a 1.8 percent annual increase and was the fastest gain since a 5.3 percent rise in the year to February 2004.

Such a big increase in spending is unlikely to be sustained, and some worry that wages have been slow to improve. Still, analysts said they expect consumer spending to continue to expand at a more reasonable pace as investors cash in on stock market gains.

A recent run of data has provided encouraging early hope that Mr. Abe’s push for aggressive fiscal and monetary policies can get the country’s economy, the world’s third-largest, moving again.

Household spending is crucial to reigniting growth, and in this respect the data should come as a relief to Haruhiko Kuroda, governor of the Bank of Japan, who hopes to see the economy generate 2 percent inflation in roughly two years.

On the whole, the figures suggest that expectations for Mr. Abe’s combination of fiscal spending, monetary stimulus and structural change, known as Abenomics, are having a positive impact on Japanese households, though the corporate sector is lagging.

“I expect first-quarter gross domestic product growth to exceed an annualized 2 percent, and if the corporate sector catches up with households, the pace of growth could accelerate,” said Yoshiki Shinke, senior economist at the Dai-Ichi Life Research Institute.

Mr. Abe’s policy mix has driven the yen to a four-year low against the dollar and led to a 50 percent rally in Japanese share prices from last November, which has helped buoy consumer sentiment.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/05/01/business/global/household-spending-in-japan-soars-at-fastest-pace-in-9-years.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Japanese Exports Rise, but Demand for Goods Is Lackluster

TOKYO — A small increase in Japanese exports, improving business confidence and surging investment flows may show early successes for Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s pro-growth strategy, but companies have yet to see signs of a sustained economic lift, data showed Thursday.

Exports rose 1.1 percent in March from the level of a year earlier, sentiment among manufacturers rose for a fifth consecutive month in April, and foreign investors bought a record amount of Japanese stocks last week.

But as Mr. Abe’s policy agenda, dubbed Abenomics, underpinned optimism for a recovery, the data also showed a weaker yen was increasing import bills, with Japan posting a record fiscal-year trade deficit of ¥8.17 trillion, or $83.7 billion, and a Reuters poll showed sentiment remained negative among manufacturers with many yet to see sizeable increases in orders or demand.

“The outlook is seen brightening as the yen has weakened, but it takes time before it leads to actual demand and orders,” an electric machinery company said in the Reuters Tankan poll, which measures sentiment among manufacturers.

Mr. Abe’s push for aggressive fiscal and monetary policies after two decades of stagnation has driven the stock market up and the yen down since November.

The centerpiece of that effort is the Bank of Japan’s $1.4 trillion stimulus plan, announced April 4, which aims to double the monetary base by the end of 2014.

Since mid-November, the stock market has surged more than 50 percent and the yen has fallen more than 20 percent against the dollar.

That has attracted the interest of foreign investors — they bought a record ¥1.57 trillion worth of Japanese stocks in the week that ended April 13 and bought ¥8.22 trillion worth since mid-November. Japanese investors, capitalizing on the fall in the yen, are also bringing back funds from overseas.

Akira Inoue, head of global business development at Sumitomo Mitsui Trust Bank’s global fiduciary business department, said that until recently foreign institutional investors had no interest in the Japanese market.

“Even after Japanese stocks’ rally began late last year, many took a wait-and-see attitude. But the situation changed in March,” Mr. Inoue said.

Business confidence has improved through Mr. Abe’s first months in office, and the Reuters Tankan data showed manufacturers’ sentiment rose seven points, to minus 4, in April.

The index in the Reuters poll is derived by subtracting the percentage of pessimistic responses from optimistic ones. The lower the number, the gloomier the outlook.

Companies expect the indicator to turn positive in coming months. However, they also say the real economic effect of Abenomics has been limited so far.

“The Reuters Tankan underlines rising expectations among Japanese firms for a brighter outlook, although the real economy is lagging behind those expectations,” said Takeshi Minami, chief economist at Norinchukin Research Institute.

That is not unexpected — it takes time for a weaker yen to increase exports and for the wealth effects of rising markets to flow through — but the risk is that if activity does not pick up, confidence in Mr. Abe and the economy could falter.

Another risk is that although policy makers can drive the yen lower to give a price advantage to Japanese exporters, they cannot control demand elsewhere.

Uncertainty about China’s economy, Europe’s troubles and a slow recovery in the United States all raise doubts about how much export demand can increase, whatever the yen’s value.

“The broad picture remains intact as the weaker yen is having more of an impact on boosting imports than exports, while the recovery in the world economy, particularly China, is tepid,” Mr. Minami said.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/04/19/business/global/japanese-exports-rise-but-demand-for-goods-is-lackluster.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Economix Blog: Further Reading on the Nobel Economics Laureates

CATHERINE RAMPELL

CATHERINE RAMPELL

Dollars to doughnuts.

The spotlight today is on Christopher A. Sims of Princeton University and Thomas J. Sargent of New York University, the winners of the Bank of Sweden Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel.

The two new laureates have very similar academic pedigrees: They both received their Ph.D.’s from Harvard in 1968, and both previously studied at the University of California, Berkeley. Several years later they both landed at the University of Minnesota. They are currently jointly teaching a graduate course in macroeconomics at Princeton.

DESCRIPTIONAgence France-Presse — Getty Images The Nobel laureates Christopher A. Sims, left, a professor at Princeton University, and Thomas J. Sargent, a professor at New York University.

The prize committee has published a description of their work for the general public, as well as a more technical version.

Here is the only paper the two wrote together, from 1977.

Some other links for Dr. Sargent:

  • Dr. Sargent’s home page, and his curriculum vitae.
  • A summary of his contributions, written by Tyler Cowen, an economist at George Mason University.
  • Some of his older papers; some of his newer papers.
  • An interview he did with the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis in 2010.
  • Another interview with the journal Macroeconomic Dynamics, in 2005.
  • A (short) graduation speech he delivered on the University of California, Berkeley, about a few key economic principles.
  • A Q.A. a representative of the Nobel committee (named Adam Smith, of course) conducted with Dr. Sargent.
  • Video of a lecture Dr. Sargent gave at the London School of Economics in 2010, titled “Uncertainty and Ambiguity in American Fiscal and Monetary Policies.”

And some links for Dr. Sims:

  • His home page, and his curriculum vitae.
  • Another summary of contributions from Tyler Cowen.
  • Links to his research papers.
  • An interview he did with the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis in 2007.
  • An interview with The Journal of Business and Economics Statistics, from 2002.
  • An interview with the journal Macroeconomic Dynamics, in 2003 (subscription required).
  • An interview with a representative of the Nobel committee (Adam Smith).
  • A video of a lecture from an Institute for New Economic Thinking conference in 2010. The lecture is titled “How Empirical Evidence Does or Does Not Influence Economic Thinking and Theory: Calibration, Statistical Inference and Structural Change.”
  • One of his more famous papers on the statistical technique he developed to study the larger economy. (Warning: this is pretty technical.)

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=a03e6f8495ae928b3cec06dbfcbd516e