UPDATE 1-Japan's retail sales post worst fall in 4 years as tax hike hits demand


Reuters | Tokyo | Updated: 28-11-2019 06:13 IST | Created: 28-11-2019 06:07 IST
UPDATE 1-Japan's retail sales post worst fall in 4 years as tax hike hits demand
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Japan's retail sales tumbled at their fastest pace in more than 4-1/2 years in October as a sales tax hike prompted consumers to cut spending, raising a red flag over the strength of domestic demand.

The Japanese government increased the nationwide sales tax to 10% from 8% on Oct. 1, in a bid to fix the industrial world's heaviest public debt burden, which is more twice the size the country's gross domestic product. However, some analysts have warned the tax hike, previously postponed twice, could leave the economy without a growth driver amid a slump in exports and production.

Retail sales fell 7.1% in October from a year earlier, pulled down by weak demand for big ticket items such as cars and household appliances as well as clothing, trade ministry data showed on Thursday. The data showed department store sales were hit particularly hard. The drop marked the biggest since a 9.7% fall in March 2015 and was worse than a 4.4% decline predicted by economists in a Reuters poll.

The decline indicated retail sales were falling at a fast pace after the sales tax hike kicked in last month. At the time of the previous tax hike in April 2014, retail sales fell 4.3% in that month. Seasonally-adjusted retail sales dropped 14.4% month-on-month in October, the data showed.

The negative reading comes after separate data this month showed Japan's economy nearly stalled in the third quarter, while exports in October shrank at their fastest pace in three years. The gloomy conditions have led to calls for the government to compile a big spending package to keep the country's fragile economic recovery on track.

Some analysts have said retail sales in October have been particularly weak due to poor weather, after a huge typhoon tore through central and eastern Japan, exacerbating the negative effect from the sales tax hike. The previous tax hike to 8% from 5% in 2014 hit the broader economy hard as households tightened their purse strings after front-loading purchases before the hike.

But policymakers have said that the tax hike last month has not triggered such a big swing in demand, given the smaller extent of the hike and various government measures to help offset the hit to spending.

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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