Japan output jump, low jobless rate yet to spark inflation
But household spending remained soft and consumer inflation was flat when stripping away the effect of rising
energy costs, underscoring the challenges the Bank of Japan faces in
generating sustained price rises backed by steady wage growth.
Japanese factory output rose at the fastest pace in eight months
and the jobless rate hit a two-decade low in February, a sign a rebound
in overseas demand continued to brighten prospects for the country's
export-reliant economy.
But household spending remained soft and
consumer inflation was flat when stripping away the effect of rising energy costs, underscoring the challenges the Bank of Japan faces in
generating sustained price rises backed by steady wage growth.
The
data may reinforce market expectations that while the BOJ's next policy
move could be to withdraw its massive stimulus, the timing would be
some time away, analysts said.
We can tell that Japan's economy
is benefiting from a cyclical pickup in the global economy," said
Masamichi Adachi, senior Japan economist at JPMorgan Securities.
"But
corporates are reluctant to raise prices because consumption is weak
... The simple answer for the government and the BOJ is to wait and
see."
Industrial output rose 2.0 percent in February from the
previous month, beating market forecasts for a 1.2 percent gain to mark
the biggest increase since June last year, as automakers ramped up
production of new models, data showed on Friday.
Separate figures
showed Japan's jobless rate hit a 22-year low of 2.8 percent in
February, down 0.2 percentage point from the previous month.
But
household spending fell 3.8 percent in February from a year earlier, a
bigger decline than market forecasts for a 1.7 percent drop, suggesting a
tightening labour market has yet to drive up wages enough to boost consumption.
A
rebound in energy costs pushed core consumer inflation to 0.2 percent in
February, matching a median market forecast and marking the fastest
annual pace in nearly two years.
But a separate consumer price
index that excludes the effect of volatile fresh food and energy costs
rose just 0.1 percent in February, suggesting that weak consumption was
preventing companies from raising prices of non-energy items.
Tokyo
core consumer prices, which are less influenced by gasoline costs and
released a month ahead of nationwide figures, fell 0.4 percent in March
from a year earlier. That was bigger than a 0.3 percent drop in
February.
"While we still think price growth will continue to pick
up, it's true the underlying trend isn't that strong," said Yoshiki
Shinke, chief economist at Dai-ichi Life Research Institute.
"Depending on oil and yen moves, it may take longer than expected for inflation to approach 1 percent," he said.
Japan's
long-stagnant economy has shown signs of life in recent months, with
exports and factory output benefiting from a recovery in global demand.
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