Report Shows Japanese Economy Had First Growth Since 1997
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS -- June 10, 1999
TOKYO -- Massive public works spending helped Japan's economy reverse itself in the first three months of this year, with the government reporting Thursday an unexpectedly strong 1.9 percent growth rate -- the first sign of growth since the summer of 1997.
While hardly torrid, the January-March gross domestic product increase surprised many economists and was well above the 0.8 contraction in the last three months of 1998 -- the fifth straight quarter of decline.
Officials welcomed the data as a positive sign, but said the government will continue attempts to spur a full recovery from the country's worst recession since World War II.
"We will continue to watch the direction of the economy," said chief government spokesman Hiromu Nonaka.
The spurt marked an end, though perhaps only temporarily, to Japan's prolonged slump.
If the growth pace set in the last quarter were to continue -- and few think it will -- GDP would expand a respectable 7.9 percent this year, the government said. That's compared to last year's contraction of 2.0 percent.
The government's official forecast calls for 0.5 percent growth in the current fiscal year, which ends in March 2000.
Haruhiko Kuroda, a top-ranked Finance Ministry official, gushed that the growth in the measure of all goods and services produced in the country was "really great."
But Economic Planning Agency head Taiichi Sakaiya noted that record-high unemployment and efforts at structural reform need close watching.
Separately, a draft plan released by the ruling party Thursday set a goal for creating 750,000 public and private sector jobs. The government was expected to formally unveil the plan on Friday.
April's unemployment rate among men hit a record 5 percent while Japan's overall jobless rate remained steady at a record high of 4.8 percent.
With few prospects for a quick turnaround in unemployment, the latest GDP number came as good news for Prime Minister Keizo Obuchi, who pledged last summer to engineer a full recovery within two years.
Obuchi will be able to show that Japan is living up to its commitment to prod its economy when he meets with the heads of the other major industrialized nations and Russia later this month in Germany.
Economists in Tokyo had expected, on average, a 0.1 percent contraction in the first quarter.
But massive spending on public works apparently managed to stop the economy from shrinking further and even fueled the growth.
Private consumption and capital investment were better than expected but still not strong enough to drive the economy without help from public coffers, the government said.
"It arguably shows that fiscal policy is having a substantial impact on the economy, despite views that the policy would be largely ineffective," said Yasushi Okada, chief economist at Credit Suisse First Boston.
The figures indicate that the economy may have bottomed out, he said.
Others were less sure.
"These numbers aren't in line with other economic indicators that came out during the period. I would be skeptical," said Andrew Shipley, economist at Schroders Securities (Japan) Ltd.
The figures jolted Japan's financial markets. Tokyo shares surged and the dollar sank against the yen after the GDP numbers were leaked by a local paper just before the close of trading on Thursday.
The Nikkei Stock Average climbed 480.12 points, or 2.89 percent, to 17,102.62. The dollar dipped as low as 117.63 yen, but rebounded above 119 yen on reported intervention by the Bank of Japan to support the dollar.
In early afternoon trading in New York, the dollar had drifted back to 118.63 yen.
Copyright 1999 The New York Times Company |