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Japan’s households increase spending for first time in 4 months

Reuters . Tokyo
07 Aug 2022 00:00:00 | Update: 06 Aug 2022 23:21:29
Japan’s households increase spending for first time in 4 months
A staff wearing a face shield sells fish at Japan’s supermarket group Aeon’s shopping mall as the mall reopens amid the coronavirus disease outbreak in Chiba, Japan – Reuters Photo

Japan’s households increased spending for the first time in four months in June, as demand for travel services rose in a positive sign for broader recovery prospects.

Spending jumped 3.5per cent in June from a year earlier, government data showed on Friday, posting its first year-on-year rise since February as households opened their purse strings for overnight stays, package tours and outdoor goods.

The data, which was stronger than the median estimate for a 1.5per cent rise in a Reuters poll, showed people spent less on fish and vegetables, while also spending more on transportation.

While the rise was larger than expected, it was unlikely to dispel worries that Japan’s recovery will lag those seen in other major economies such as the United States, especially after Covid-19 infections saw a record surge in recent weeks.

There will be cases where people give up travelling given the pandemic’s rapid spread, even without new restrictions in place against it, said Atsushi Takeda, chief economist at Itochu Economic Research Institute.

“The momentum driving the recovery in travel will slow for the moment,” Takeda added.

Spending on overnight stays in June topped levels seen before the pandemic three years earlier by 4.5per cent, data showed.

Separate data on Friday showed Japan’s real wages extended declines for a third straight month in June, as consumer prices rose faster than nominal wages, which saw their strongest growth in four years, in a worrying sign for households’ purchasing power.

“Wage growth remains subdued once we allow for the increases in working hours, and will not be enough to prompt the Bank of Japan to tighten monetary policy,” said Darren Tay, Japan economist at Capital Economics.

A private sector survey earlier this week showed growth in services sector activity stalling in July as rising inflation and uncertainty about the global economy hurt demand.

Some analysts have started to warn that Japan’s economic recovery may slow in the current quarter following an expected expansion in April-June due to a modest rebound in consumer demand after the government lifted Covid-19 curbs.

Friday’s data showed spending also rose from the previous month, gaining 1.5per cent on a seasonally-adjusted basis.

That gain, which was stronger than a forecast 0.2per cent rise, marked a rebound from a sharp 1.9per cent decline in the previous month.

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