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Business / World Business

Japan factory output down in July

Published: 01 Sep 2015 - 12:00 am | Last Updated: 02 Nov 2021 - 02:57 am
Peninsula

Flames shoot out of a chimney at a petrochemical plant in Kawasaki near Tokyo yesterday.

Tokyo: Japan’s factory output contracted a worse-than-expected 0.6 percent on-month in July, official data showed yesterday, owing to lacklustre demand at home and as a slowdown in China weighs on exports.
The reading published by the industry ministry was weaker than the median forecast for a modest 0.1 percent rise in a survey of economists by Bloomberg News. In June, industrial production rose 1.1 percent from May.
Production cutbacks in the electrical components and transport equipment industries led the decline in manufacturing, according to the government, as firms tried to cut down on an inventory buildup.
“Production is sluggish because private consumption and exports remain weak,” Toru Suehiro, an economist at Mizuho Securities, told Bloomberg News. 
“Concern about China and emerging economies is posing a risk to output.” Japan’s overseas shipments have slowed, raising concerns about the fragile recovery in the world’s number three economy as demand falls in neighbouring giant China.
China-bound shipments were off 1.3 percent in July from 12 months earlier in volume terms, outstripping a 0.4 percent fall to the rest of Asia. Despite a recovery in the US economy, a slowdown in China — Asia’s top economy and a major market for Japanese exporters — has raised a red flag. Japan’s economy contracted in the three months to June, boosting speculation the central bank will be forced to unleash more stimulus as Tokyo’s “Abenomics” growth blitz stumbles.
Bank of Japan governor Haruhiko Kuroda said in New York last week that weakness in production and exports would pass and that leading indicators point to a pick up in business investment.
AFP