Japan logs biggest current account deficit since 2014 as oil import costs surge
TOKYO: Japan recorded its largest current account deficit
since the start of 2014 in January as a jump in oil import costs offset gains
in investment income, with continuing uncertainty due to the Ukraine crisis and
COVID-19 pandemic.
The current account data highlighted the dependence of
Japan's resource-deficient economy on imports of commodities and raw materials,
which caused trade deficit to widen.
Japan, the world's third-largest economy, posted a current
account deficit of ¥1.1887 trillion (US$10.31 billion) in January, the data
showed, versus economists' median estimate of a ¥880 billion deficit in a
Reuters poll.
It was the second straight month of deficit and marked the
second largest deficit under comparable data going back to 1985.
Surging fuel costs drove up the value of imports by 39.9 per
cent in January from a year earlier, outpacing a 15.2 per cent rise in exports.
In addition, Japan's trade deficit with China widened in
January. China-bound exports slowed before the Lunar New Year break while
imports from the country surged due to stocking demand before the holiday
period.
"Given such a temporary factor and a hefty investment
income surplus, I don't think Japan's balance of payment will swing to deficit
as a trend anytime soon," said Takashi Miwa, chief economist at Nomura
Securities.
Japan earns steady and hefty return from its past investment
in securities and direct investment overseas, which have replaced trade as the
main driver of its current account surplus in recent years.
While a weak yen also helped inflate the cost of imports, its boost to export volumes was not as great as it once was due to an ongoing shift of exporters' production abroad, analysts say.
Underscoring changes in Japan's economic structure, a steady
rise in returns from Japanese direct and portfolio investment overseas helped
offset the trade deficit, bringing Japan's primary income surplus to ¥1.289
trillion in January.
The data also showed sharp declines in foreign tourist
arrivals, reducing the travel account to a surplus of just ¥12.3 billion. The
overall services deficit came to ¥737.9 billion, the data showed.
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