Thursday, April 27, 2006

Mild Deflation Persists

The yen fell yesterday against the dollar after Chief Cabinet Secretary Shinzo Abe and internal affairs minister Heizo Takenaka both stated that mild deflation persists in Japan. Commentators are speculating that the government may be just trying to delay an earlier end of the BOJ's zero-rates policy, but accept that there is some truth the pace and degree of the forceast increase in prices is

Better, or Worse-Off?

Most people in Japan seem to think that their living standards have deteriorated under Koizumi. That is the surprise finding in the latest Asahi survey. Apart from his commment that "Japan's economy is on solid ground and deflation in its last throes" (which I don't fopr one moment accept), he makes some worthwhile points:A funny thing is happening on the road to applying ``Reaganomics'' to

Thursday, April 20, 2006

Japanese Trade

Japan's long term economic surplus continues to weaken, it is down by 11.9% year on year. Of course the main culprit is the rising cost of oil imports (on which Japan is heavily dependent). Exports rose 18.1 percent, but imports rose 25.2 percent to a record 5.8414 trillion yen, continuing a string of double-digit rises since April 2005.It is this part of the process we need to watch, as any

Monday, April 3, 2006

Japanese Labour Market: Running on Half-Empty?

Well, things certainly have been moving quite quickly in Japan recently. The recovery seems to have just started to gain some traction, and now we are being told that internal capacity limits may be being reached due to the presence oF labour shortages:"Japan’s large manufacturers are short of capacity for the first time since the bubble era of the early 1990s, while employers across the country