Friday, March 30, 2012

Japan industrial output down on weak export demand

FILE - In this Feb. 13, 2012 file photo, a security guard controls the traffic at a container terminal in Tokyo. Weaker than expected factory production in Japan has underscored the fragility of its economic recovery as growth throughout Asia slows. Softening demand for exports led to the first decline in industrial production in the world's third-largest economy in three months, the government said Friday, March 30, though it reported modest improvements in employment and consumer confidence. (AP Photo/Shizuo Kambayashi, File)

FILE - In this Feb. 13, 2012 file photo, a security guard controls the traffic at a container terminal in Tokyo. Weaker than expected factory production in Japan has underscored the fragility of its economic recovery as growth throughout Asia slows. Softening demand for exports led to the first decline in industrial production in the world's third-largest economy in three months, the government said Friday, March 30, though it reported modest improvements in employment and consumer confidence. (AP Photo/Shizuo Kambayashi, File)

FILE - In this Jan. 25, 2012 file photo, a worker pedals a bicycle at a container terminal in Tokyo. Weaker than expected factory production in Japan has underscored the fragility of its economic recovery as growth throughout Asia slows. Softening demand for exports led to the first decline in industrial production in the world's third-largest economy in three months, the government said Friday, March 30, though it reported modest improvements in employment and consumer confidence. (AP Photo/Junji Kurokawa, File)

(AP) ? Weaker than expected factory production in Japan has underscored the fragility of its economic recovery as growth throughout Asia slows.

Softening demand for exports led to the first decline in industrial production in the world's third-largest economy in three months, the government said Friday, though it reported modest improvements in employment and consumer confidence.

The news cast a pall over share markets in Asia, already jittery over the pending release Sunday of Chinese economic indicators. The Nikkei 225 index in Tokyo fell 0.3 percent to 10,083.56.

The 1.2 percent decline in industrial output in February was worse than expected and reflected lagging output in the transport equipment, electronics components and machinery industries. Production of cell phones, large passenger cars and liquid crystal devices also weakened, the government said.

"Whether this recent trend will be sustained will depend on the extent of the recovery in Asia," said Masayuki Kichikawa, an economist at Bank of America-Merrill Lynch. "The uncertainty over Chinese data is a very important factor."

The devastating tsunami in March last year ? and a shift of manufacturing overseas to cut costs and reduce damage caused by the strong yen ? plunged Japan's trade account into the red in 2011 for the first time since 1980.

Slowing growth in powerhouse China, the debt crisis in Europe and continued frailty in the U.S. economy have further bit into demand for exports, which remains the strongest driver of growth for Japan.

Despite February's relatively weak number, output is forecast to rise 2.6 percent in March and 0.7 percent in April, as growth accelerates due to a pick up in rebuilding of northeastern regions devastated by last year's disasters.

Kichikawa said he expects the economy to "bottom out" in the second quarter of the year, boosted by strengthening demand for industrial materials such as steel, nonferrous metals and chemicals.

"We think production in Japan is on the uptrend, mainly due to reconstruction demand," he said.

Japan's economy shrank at an annual pace of 2.3 percent in the fourth quarter, also hit by slowing public investment due to political bickering that delayed parliamentary approval for a 12 trillion yen ($156 billion) extra budget for tsunami reconstruction.

The economy contracted last year by 0.9 percent from 2010, when GDP grew a robust 4.4 percent. In 2009, the economy shrank 5.5 percent.

In its latest economic assessment, however, the Organization of Economic Cooperation and Development forecast that Japan's growth would lead that of other major industrial economies in the first quarter, at 3.4 percent.

In other data for February, Japan's consumer price index showed a stronger than expected increase in February of 0.3 percent from the year before, to 99.8. It was up 0.2 percent from January.

Forecasts had been for virtually no change in the index.

Rising costs for fuel and food were the main factors pushing prices higher, the Statistics Bureau reported.

Although rising crude oil prices threaten to further push production prices higher, slight gains in inflation are viewed as a positive for an economy that has been wrestling for years with deflation, or falling prices, which can be a drag on economic growth.

Meanwhile, unemployment fell in February, to 4.5 percent from 4.6 percent in January.

The Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare reported that the ratio of job offers to job seekers rose to 0.75 in February, up from 0.73 in January. It was the highest figure since November 2008, the ministry said.

Consumer confidence also rose, reflected in a 3.5 percent uptick in retail sales, the largest year-on-year gain since August 2010, the trade ministry reported Thursday.

Demand was also boosted by government subsidies for car purchases, which rose 21.4 percent from a year earlier in February, after jumping 24 percent in January.

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Follow Elaine Kurtenbach on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/ekurtenbachsh

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2012-03-30-AS-Japan-Economy/id-968fca18159e447eae1b6f9c4b505ae6

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