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POLITICAL ECONOMY
BoJ lowers Japan growth forecast
by Staff Writers
Tokyo (AFP) July 12, 2011

The Bank of Japan on Tuesday lowered its real GDP growth forecast for this fiscal year, citing a sharp contraction in production in the immediate aftermath of the March 11 earthquake and tsunami.

The BoJ cut its growth forecast for the year ending March 2012 to 0.4 percent from an earlier 0.6 percent due to the record earthquake and a tsunami that devastated the northeast coast and sparked a nuclear crisis.

While the central bank upgraded its general view of the economy, saying it is "picking up" as post-quake supply-side constraints ease, it said growth prospects would be lower than earlier thought for the fiscal year ending March 2012.

It added that earlier projections for 2.9 percent growth in the year starting April 1, 2012 remain unchanged amid expectations Japan's economy will return to "a moderate recovery path from the second half of fiscal 2011."

The board also voted unanimously for the key interest rate to remain unchanged at between zero and 0.1 percent.

In the aftermath of the earthquake, the BoJ injected a record amount of cash into the banking system and doubled an asset purchase fund to 10 trillion yen ($125 billion), a key policy tool it kept unchanged Tuesday.

The BoJ said domestic demand is picking up as household and business sentiment improves, while exports should also rise in the second half, striking a more upbeat tone compared to many private-sector analysts who see the economy shrinking this year.

But it warned that "uncertainty has increased somewhat with regard to the longer-term outlook for electricity supply constraints" with generating capacity lost after March 11, including the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant.

The twin disasters devastated entire towns along the northeast coast and left more than 20,000 dead or missing while wreaking havoc on industry, pushing the economy into recession in Japan's worst crisis since World War II.

The nation's biggest firms such as Sony and Toyota were forced to shutter plants and halt production due to shortages in electricity and parts caused by supply chain disruption, sending output and exports tumbling.

But Japan's recovery has been quicker than expected, as companies approach normal production levels ahead of earlier forecasts amid expectations that reconstruction spending will boost the economy in the second half.

The BoJ's Tankan survey of business sentiment earlier this month showed firms expect conditions to improve by September.

Recent data also suggest the worst of the post-quake impact may be over for the economy, say analysts. Industrial output posted the second-largest gain on record in May.

However, the government has warned this may have been partly driven by firms boosting production ahead of a decree for large users in the Tokyo and Tohoku regions to reduce consumption by 15 percent for three months starting July.

The move comes as capacity has been lost after the disasters, including the Fukushima plant, which suffered reactor meltdowns and spewed radiation after cooling systems were crippled, prompting the evacuation of tens of thousands.

A wave of anti-nuclear sentiment in Japan after March 11 has led to utilities not directly affected by the disaster not restarting reactors that were under maintenance at the time, amid objections from local governments.

As a result only 19 of Japan's 54 reactors are now operating, with more due to shut down for regular checks soon.

Bank of Japan Governor Masaaki Shirakawa said at a press conference he is "strongly concerned" that an electricity supply shortage in the long-term could make Japanese firms shift their production overseas.

The board also maintained its core consumer price index projection for this fiscal year at a 0.7 percent increase, a pace that will also continue for the following year.




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Zurich, Switzerland (UPI) Jul 11, 2011
China, the locomotive that has been driving the world economy, is slowing. And since the rest of the world is in no shape to compensate, a second recession or a very prolonged slowdown is starting to look inevitable. None of the world's other economies looks capable of making up for the boost China has been giving to global growth over the past three years. Europe remains stuck i ... read more


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