Japanese export decline slows

6.2% decrease fuels optimism for trade recovery

Workers at a wharf in Tokyo are dwarfed by a stack of shipping containers in November.
Workers at a wharf in Tokyo are dwarfed by a stack of shipping containers in November.

— Japan’s exports posted their smallest fall in 14 months in November as robust Asian demand bolstered hopes a recovery in trade will avoid another recession in the world’s second-biggest economy.

Exports, a mainstay of Japan’s economy, fell 6.2 percent to $55 billion from a year earlier, the Finance Ministry said Monday. In October, exports fell 23.2 percent.

The smaller decline in exports is a rare of piece of encouraging news for an economy struggling to find its footing amid a strong yen and deflation. Government spending measures around the world have helped fuel demand for Japan’s cars, gadgets and machinery.

Goldman Sachs economist Chiwoong Lee said the figures suggest that the turnaround in exports is sustainable.

“The likely pattern for the Japanese economy is an underpinning from exports and related capex [capital expenditure} as domestic demand crumbles due to the loss of policy stimulus,” Lee said.

Emerging from recession, Japan’s economy expanded at an annualized pace of 1.3 percent in the July-September quarter. Since then, however, the economy has come under increasing pressure from deflation and a stronger yen, which reduces the value of exporters’ earnings abroad.

A survey in the Nikkei financial daily Monday showed that nearly half of business leaders polled worry that Japan will fall back into recession next year. The heads of 140 major Japanese firms in the survey cited the appreciating yen and the waning impact of economic stimulus steps.

With imports down 16.8 percent from a year earlier to $50.4 billion, Japan posted a trade surplus of about $4.1 billion for November.

Among key regions, Japan’s shipments to the U.S. fell 7.9 percent for the 27th straight drop but the fall was far less severe than previous months. Japanese exports to the European Union fell 15.9 percent.

Asia-bound exports, meanwhile, rose 4.7 percent, led by electrical equipment, general machinery and motor vehicles. Shipments to Taiwan jumped almost 17 percent, while those to China expanded 7.8 percent.

Japan’s neighbors have become increasingly vital to Japan’s economy. Exports to the rest of Asia totaled $29.6 billion - more than those to North America ($10 billion) and Western Europe ($6.84 billion) combined.

Business, Pages 23 on 12/22/2009

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