Japan's economy will probably shrink at an annual 12.1 per cent pace this quarter, the sharpest drop since 1974, as exports collapse, Barclays Capital said.
Gross domestic product in the three months ending tomorrow will fall at almost three times the 4.1 per cent rate previously predicted, said Kyohei Morita, chief Japan economist at Barclays in Tokyo, after reports last week showed industrial production and exports posted the biggest declines on record in November.
“Given the speed and the length of the contraction, this recession could be the most severe in the postwar era,” Morita said. “We expect negative growth will continue for a fifth straight quarter to the April-June period of 2009.”
Plunging sales of cars and electronics are forcing companies from Toyota Motor Corp to Panasonic Corp to idle plants and fire workers. The Nikkei 225 Stock Average tumbled a record 42 per cent this year, eclipsing a 39 per cent slide in 1990 that helped trigger a decade of economic stagnation and deflation.
A 12.1 per cent annualised contraction would be the steepest since the first quarter of 1974, when the oil shock caused the economy to shrink 13.1 per cent, according to Barclays.
Japanese government bonds completed the best year since 2002, with the yield on the benchmark 10-year bond falling 3.5 basis points to 1.165 per cent, the lowest in more than five years, at the close in Tokyo on Tuesday.
Panasonic Electric Works Co, a Panasonic subsidiary, said this week that it plans to shut three factories and eliminate 1,000 jobs by the year ending March 2011.
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Aeon Co, Japan's largest supermarket operator, will cut spending on stores at home and slow expansion in China.
Production plummeted 8.1 per cent in November from October, the most since comparable data were first kept 55 years ago. Companies surveyed said they planned to reduce output a further 8 per cent this month and 2.1 per cent in January. Exports slid an unprecedented 26.7 per cent last month from a year earlier.
The numbers were “shocking,” Morita said. “Exports are dropping at a very rapid pace and capital investment also is fizzling.”
The data prompted other economists to revise their GDP projections. Bank of America Corp. now predicts an annualized 6.5 per cent contraction from a 2.7 per cent drop previously estimated.
“External demand has vanished all of a sudden,” Tomoko Fujii, head of Japan economics and strategy at Bank of America in Tokyo. “Almost every industrialized nation is in a recession. Even in China, growth is slowing sharply.”
Japan Research Institute went even further, foreseeing a 14.1 per cent drop.
“I couldn't believe my eyes when I calculated the figures,” said Takuto Murase, a Tokyo-based economist at the researcher, which is owned by Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group Inc. “This could be the worst contraction in the postwar era.”
The most severe financial crisis since the Great Depression is spreading from industrialised nations to developing markets including Asia, the destination for about half of Japan's exports. Consumers at home are unlikely to pick up the slack, with household confidence at a record low and job prospects worsening.
“This is the toughest climate I've seen,” said Aeon Chief Financial Officer Masaaki Toyoshima, who began working for the retailer in 1974. “It's looking tougher by the month.”
Deflation may return next year as the recession deepens, the yen extends its gains and companies restrain wages to protect profits, the Economist Intelligence Unit wrote in a report published on Tuesday. Consumer-price inflation eased the most in a decade in November as prices of oil and other commodities slumped.
“Many parts of the economy are already suffering from deflation,” the London-based EIU said. “The poor outlook for the economy will continue to restrict companies' pricing power, and real wages are forecast to continue falling in 2009.”
Policy makers have little scope to respond. The Bank of Japan has already cut its benchmark interest rate to 0.1 per cent and started buying short-term corporate debt. Any extra spending by the government risks swelling the public debt, which is already the world's largest at more than 170 per cent of GDP.
Prime Minister Taro Aso has yet to get parliamentary approval for plans to spend about ¥10 trillion($111 billion) to support households and the unemployed. Aso, whose approval rating fell 10 points to 21 per cent in a Nikkei newspaper survey published this week, has to call a general election by September.
“Given that Aso is struggling to show his political leadership, the fiscal policy that could influence Japan's economy will be the US's and China's, not be Japan's,” Morita said. “Even once Japan eventually recovers, the economy will still depend on exports.”