Japan may delay another hike in the sales tax


Best analysis

Prime Minister Abe has provided another hint that Tokyo may delay a hike in the sales tax. In an interview with the Financial Times, the PM stated that Japan has the opportunity to end deflation and this cannot be ignored. Although, he admitted that Japan must also look to the next generation.

Abe stated that “by increasing the consumption tax rate if the economy derails and if it decelerates, there will be no increase in tax revenues so it would render the whole exercise meaningless.” This shows how much rides on the strength of the economy in the third quarter. The final data is out in early December and that’s when the PM is expected to finalise his decision on the sales tax.

Early Q3 indicators aren’t good

However, early indicators suggest that Japan’s economic recovery hasn’t been going entirely to plan. While Abenomics has made some headway in regards to spurring economic growth and inflation, it hasn’t been the huge success that Tokyo was hoping it would be. Admittedly, this is partially due to aspects which are outside of Japan’s control, like softening global demand and heightened geopolitical tension.

Nonetheless, recent economic data suggest that Japan’s recovery may have stalled. Consumer price growth remains stagnant around a real underlying rate of 1% and there is a persistent lack of activity at the ground level in Japan. In other words, consumers remain nervous, thus they are cautious about spending more which is limiting inflation.

Wage growth is a bright spot

The only real bright spot at the moment are some possible indications that wage growth may be picking up. Labour cash earnings rose a revised 0.9% y/y in August, after rising an impressive 2.4% y/y in July. The persistence lack of wage growth in Japan has arguably been one of the biggest restrictions holding back domestic demand, thus a significant pick up in wages could go a long way to help the economy recover later this year. 

Recommended Content


Recommended Content

Editors’ Picks

EUR/USD retreats below 1.0700 after US GDP data

EUR/USD retreats below 1.0700 after US GDP data

EUR/USD came under modest bearish pressure and retreated below 1.0700. Although the US data showed that the economy grew at a softer pace than expected in Q1, strong inflation-related details provided a boost to the USD.

EUR/USD News

GBP/USD declines below 1.2500 as USD rebounds

GBP/USD declines below 1.2500 as USD rebounds

GBP/USD declined below 1.2500 and erased the majority of its daily gains with the immediate reaction to the US GDP report. The US economy expanded at a softer pace than expected in Q1 but the price deflator jumped to 3.4% from 1.8%. 

GBP/USD News

Gold drops below $2,320 as US yields shoot higher

Gold drops below $2,320 as US yields shoot higher

Gold lost its traction and turned negative on the day below $2,320 in the American session on Thursday. The benchmark 10-year US Treasury bond yield is up more than 1% on the day above 4.7% after US GDP report, weighing on XAU/USD.

Gold News

XRP extends its decline, crypto experts comment on Ripple stablecoin and benefits for XRP Ledger

XRP extends its decline, crypto experts comment on Ripple stablecoin and benefits for XRP Ledger

Ripple extends decline to $0.52 on Thursday, wipes out weekly gains. Crypto expert asks Ripple CTO how the stablecoin will benefit the XRP Ledger and native token XRP. 

Read more

After the US close, it’s the Tokyo CPI

After the US close, it’s the Tokyo CPI

After the US close, it’s the Tokyo CPI, a reliable indicator of the national number and then the BoJ policy announcement. Tokyo CPI ex food and energy in Japan was a rise to 2.90% in March from 2.50%.

Read more

Majors

Cryptocurrencies

Signatures