Japan’s economy shrank due to natural disasters

Japan‘s economy shrank in the third quarter as natural disasters hit spending and disrupted exports. The economy contracted by an annualized 1.2% between July and September, preliminary figures showed, reports BBC.

A devastating earthquake and typhoon were among the disasters to hit Japan this year, and prompted the bigger than expected contraction.

The slowdown also comes as the US and China fight a trade war which risks hurting global trade and growth. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast a 1% contraction for the three months to September.

Exports fell 1.8% from the previous quarter, the fastest decline in more than three years, Reuters said.

Japan's Economy

A man works at a container area at a port in Tokyo, Japan

Japan was hit by several natural disasters over its summer, including one of the country’s worst flooding disasters in decades, an earthquake and a deadly typhoon.

The disasters disrupted factories and hit domestic spending. Rising trade tensions and protectionism could be a drag on future growth. The US-China trade war could hit Japan particularly hard because of its important role in the global supply chain.

Exports of car parts, electronics, and industrial machinery are at risk of disruption if the trade battle escalates.

“Trade war uncertainties have begun to increase, we see some slowdown in Asia and that is gradually hitting Japan,” Kohei Iwahara, an economist at Natixis Japan Securities, told reporters.

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