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Japan Exports Sink Again in June, Dash Hopes for Quick Economic Rebound

ShareJapan exports sink again in June, dash hopes for quick economic rebound. Japan’s exports suffered a double-digit decline for the fourth month...

Written by Erwin Prasetyo · 1 min read >
Quick Economic Rebound

Japan exports sink again in June, dash hopes for quick economic rebound. Japan’s exports suffered a double-digit decline for the fourth month in a row in June as the coronavirus pandemic took a heavy toll on global demand, reinforcing expectations that the economy has sunk into its deepest recession in decades.

Quick Economic Rebound
Employees wearing protective face masks and face guards work on the automobile assembly line as the maker ramps up car production with new security and health measures as a step to resume full operations, during the outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), at Kawasaki factory of Mitsubishi Fuso Truck and Bus Corp., owned by Germany-based Daimler AG, in Kawasaki, south of Tokyo, Japan May 18, 2020. Japan exports sink again in June, dash hopes for quick economic rebound (REUTERS/Issei Kato)

Dash Hopes for Quick Economic Rebound

US-bound Japanese shipments nearly halved again due to plunging demand for cars and autoparts, while exports to China remained weak, pointing to the absence of a strong growth engine in the global economy.

Global demand for cars and other durable goods has sunk since March as the pandemic prompted many countries to lockdown, forcing businesses to shut and people to stay at home.

Though more countries have now started re-opening their economies and activity has likely bottomed out, the data could diminish hopes for a quick rebound in global demand and Japan’s export-led economy.

Ministry of Finance (MOF) data showed on Monday that Japan’s exports plummeted 26.2 percent in June from a year earlier, bigger than a 24.9 percent decline seen by economists in a Reuters poll. It followed a 28.3 percent fall in May—the worst downturn since September 2009.

The slump was aggravated by a big annual decline in US-bound car exports.

Shipments to the United States—Japan’s key market—dived 46.6 percent, due to 63.3 percent decline in shipments of automobiles, 56 percent drop in airplane engines and 58.3 percent fall in car parts.

Japan is the world’s second-largest exporter of autos.

In 2018, the United States was Japan’s largest export market, followed closely by China, and led by cars as well as motors, car parts and chip-making machinery.

Exports to China, Japan’s largest trading partner, fell 0.2 percent in the year to June, as declines in shipments of chip-making machinery and chemical materials more than offset increase in nonferrous metal and car shipments.

Shipments to Asia, which account for more than half of Japanese exports, declined 15.3 percent, and exports to the European Union fell 28.4 percent.

Japan slipped into recession for the first time in 4-1/2 years in the first quarter and is on course for its deepest postwar slump as the health crisis weighs heavily on businesses and consumers.

Reflecting weak demand and declining oil prices, imports fell 14.4 percent in the year to June, versus the median estimate for a 16.8 percent decrease, leaving the trade balance in a deficit of 268.8 billion yen (US$2.51 billion).

The Bank of Japan has signalled confidence the economy will emerge from the slump and has ruled out the risk of deflation, suggesting the central bank has paused monetary easing after it deployed stimulus twice so far this year. Japan exports sink again in June, dash hopes for quick economic rebound (Tetsushi Kajimoto, Reuters, The Jakarta Post)

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