BSS
  10 May 2022, 09:45

Japan's spending dips amid worries over surging prices

TOKYO, May 10, 2022 (BSS/AFP) - Japan's household spending dipped 2.3
percent in March from a year earlier as the cost of fuel and other items
surge, though the fall was smaller than expected.

  The decline was the first since December and due in part to the comparison
with a sharp rise in spending a year earlier.

  The decline was smaller than the market consensus of a 3.2 percent drop and
comes after a 1.1 percent rise in February and a 6.9 percent surge in
January.

  Analysts have warned that the pace of nominal wage increases in Japan is
unlikely to track rising prices, dampening spending appetites.

  In March, core consumer prices rose 0.8 percent -- the fastest increase in
more than two years -- as oil prices soared.

  Excluding energy, however, prices were down 0.7 percent.

  Some manufacturers and stores in Japan who rely on imported resources have
begun to raise prices.

  Last month, the Bank of Japan left its ultra-loose monetary policy
unchanged, while hiking its full-year inflation forecast.

  The central bank cautioned that it sees rising prices, driven by a surge in
commodity costs caused by the Ukraine war, as a temporary and volatile trend.

  And even the current consumer price rise still falls far short of the Bank
of Japan's long-term goal of two percent inflation.