TOKYO: Growth in Japan’s industrial output ground to a halt in July after June’s gains, underscoring the fragility of factory activity and the continuing challenge to policymakers grappling with a stalling economy. The flat reading compared with economists’ median estimate in a Reuters poll of a 0.8 percent increase, following a 2.3 percent increase in June, data by the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry showed on Wednesday.
Manufacturers surveyed by the ministry expect output to rise 4.1 percent in August and decline 0.7 percent in September. “July output data was a little weak and it suggested factory activity was stalling,” said Hidenobu Tokuda, senior economist at Mizuho Research Institute. “Output may temporarily rise in the current quarter as effects of Kumamoto earthquakes fade.” The economy will return to growth in the current quarter but the momentum would not last long as falling capital spending in the United States and slowing growth in China weighed on Japan’s exports and output for the rest of the year, he said.
Sluggish factory output data is yet another setback for policymakers who have struggled to generate virtuous growth in consumption and production to lift an economy mired in nearly two decades of deflation and stagnation, without much success. The ministry maintained its assessment on industrial output, saying production was seesawing but a pickup was seen in some parts. By sector, transport equipment, electronic parts and devices grew in July, while chemicals and fabricated metals fell as reaction to the prior month’s gains, a ministry official said. “We kept the assessment unchanged given that output turned flat while inventory adjustment made a steady progress and production plans suggest stable rises ahead,” he added.