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2022.08.08 18:43 GMT+8

Japan runs first current account deficit in 5 months

Updated 2022.08.08 18:43 GMT+8
CGTN

An Eneos Holdings oil refinery in Arida, Wakayama Prefecture, Japan, March 30, 2022. /CFP

Japan ran a current account deficit for the first time in five months in June as surging imports eclipsed exports, data showed on Monday, highlighting the pressure that higher energy and raw material prices are putting on the economy.

The world's third-largest economy ran a current account deficit of 132.4 billion yen ($980 million) in June, government data showed, compared with a surplus of 739.6 billion yen in the same period last year.

The data, which marked the first monthly deficit since January, was smaller than economists' median forecast for a 703.8 billion yen shortfall in a Reuters poll.

High prices for energy sources like oil and coal drove the value of imports to a record, surging 49 percent year on year and outpacing a 20-percent rise in the value of exports led by "mineral fuels" and steel.

The current account data underscored the change in Japan's economic structure as the country earns hefty returns from its portfolio investments and direct investment overseas, which are offsetting deficits in its trade balance.

The current account surplus has declined for four fiscal years in a row through March 2022.

While yen weakness has inflated the cost of imports, its boost to the value of exports has not been as great as it once was due to an ongoing shift of exporters' production abroad.

(Source: Reuters with edits)

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