REUTERS
April 7, 2020 at 11:47 JST
Wearing protective masks to help reduce the spread of the coronavirus, commuters ride an escalator on April 6 in Tokyo. (AP Photo)
Japan’s consumer spending fell in February but at a slower-than-expected pace as households scrambled for protective masks, toilet paper and staple food amid the worsening coronavirus pandemic.
But spending on travel and entertainment slumped, government data showed on Tuesday, a sign households were cutting back on nonessential purchases even before travel bans and social distancing policies took effect in March.
Analysts expect the hit to consumption from the pandemic to deepen significantly in coming months, as Prime Minister Shinzo Abe declares a state of emergency on Tuesday that is likely to paralyze activity in major cities, including Tokyo, for a month.
“This pandemic is an unprecedented type of economic crisis that deals an immediate blow to consumption and jobs,” said Yasuhide Yajima, chief economist at NLI Research Institute.
“We’ll likely see a freefall in consumption in March and beyond of a scale never experienced before. In a crisis like this, Japan has little choice but to embark on helicopter money like other major economies,” he said.
Household spending slid 0.3 percent in February from a year earlier, marking the fifth straight month of declines but a smaller drop than a median market forecast for a 3.9 percent decline and the 3.9 percent fall marked in January.
Spending on toilet paper jumped 47 percent in February from a year earlier, while that on domestic package tours slumped 37 percent.
Supply chain disruptions, travel bans and social distancing policies triggered by the pandemic have hit Japan’s economy, which is already on the brink of recession, piling pressure on policymakers to take stronger steps to ease the pain.
Abe said on Tuesday the government’s stimulus package to combat the pandemic would be among the world’s biggest and would include direct fiscal spending of 39 trillion yen ($358 billion).
It was the first time the prime minister unveiled the size of direct spending of his package, which he said would total 108 trillion yen--equal to 20 percent of economic output.
The 39 trillion yen in spending would be more than double what Japan spent to deal with the hit to growth from the collapse of Lehman Brothers in 2008.
While the stimulus could ease the immediate damage from the pandemic, lawmakers are already calling for even bigger spending to prevent bankruptcies and job losses.
With the government set to boost bond issuance to pay for the package, the Bank of Japan could ramp up bond buying to keep borrowing costs low, said Yajima of NLI Research Institute.
Analysts expect Japan’s economy, which shrank in the final quarter of last year, to post two more quarters of contraction as the pain from the pandemic deepens.
Separate data showed inflated-adjusted real wages rose for a second straight month in February, providing some relief for an economy under threat of a deep downturn over the pandemic.
Here is a collection of first-hand accounts by “hibakusha” atomic bomb survivors.
A peek through the music industry’s curtain at the producers who harnessed social media to help their idols go global.
Cooking experts, chefs and others involved in the field of food introduce their special recipes intertwined with their paths in life.
A series based on diplomatic documents declassified by Japan’s Foreign Ministry
A series about Japanese-Americans and their memories of World War II