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REPEAT: Japan Govt: Econ Pickup Intact, Some Service Prices Up

--Repeating Story Published at 1804 JST (0404 ET)
     TOKYO (MNI) - The Japanese government on Tuesday left its economic
assessment for November unchanged for the fifth straight month, repeating that
the domestic economy remains "in a moderate recovery," while noting the positive
output gap and a pickup in some service costs point to a move out of deflation.
     The government also left unchanged its assessment of consumption, capital
investment, exports and industrial production.
     In June, the government revised up its overall economic assessment for the
first time in six months.
     Looking ahead, the government maintained its outlook that the economy will
continue "recovering moderately," backed by improvement of labor and income
conditions and the effects of fiscal spending.
     It also repeated the risks to its outlook, citing uncertainty in overseas
economies and the effects of fluctuations in financial and capital markets.
     "There is a change in the phase toward moving out of deflation," the
government said.
     The output gap has turned positive, +0.5 percentage point in the
July-September quarter, indicating firmer demand against supply. Corporate
profits have been hitting record highs since fiscal 2013 and labor supply is the
tightest in 25 years.
     Japanese consumer price gains have been slow, reflecting slow wage hikes,
but labor shortages and stronger demand are leading to rises in some service
prices for theme park admission, hotels, restaurants and deliveries, the
government said.
     The government repeated that private consumption is "picking up moderately"
and that business investment is "picking up."
     Data released on Nov. 15 showed Japan's economy for the July-September
quarter posted a modest 0.3% rise on quarter, or an annualized 1.4%, as a
rebound in net exports offset a slump in consumer spending caused by bad
weather.
     "The decline in private consumption is temporary caused by the long stretch
of rainy days and a series of typhoons," said Hideyuki Ibaragi, director of
macro-economic analysis at the Cabinet Office.
     The government also left unchanged its assessment of exports and industrial
production, the key drivers for current modest economic growth, saying they are
both "pickup up."
     New vehicle sales dropped in October, partly due to the suspension of
production and shipments by Nissan in the wake of its below-standard vehicle
inspection scandal. The lingering effects of the introduction of new models has
now faded.
     The impact of the Nissan scandal appears to be limited as it does not
affect exports. About 60% of Nissan's domestic production is for exports and
production is returning to normal, Ibaragi said.
     But he added that the government will watch for the longer-term effect of
the latest quality control scandals involving major Japanese manufacturers.
     Kobe Steel has disclosed that some of its inspectors faked data for a wide
range of its products from iron and steel to copper and aluminum and machinery.
It has withdrawn its net income forecast and will stop paying dividends.
     In a separate scandal, Nissan Motor recalled about 1.2 million cars in
Japan that did not meet domestic rules on final safety inspections. Tests were
performed by staff who were not certified to check whether the vehicles met
government standards. Subaru also said it had allowed uncertified staff to
perform final quality checks of finished vehicles.
--MNI Tokyo Bureau; tel: +81 90-4670-5309; email: max.sato@marketnews.com

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