Personal consumption rose 0.1%, while business spending gained 1.1%. Inventories contributed 0.6 percentage points to growth, while net exports posted a drag of 0.8 percentage points.
The revised figures confirmed that the world’s fourth-largest economy contracted even before US President Donald Trump added to the headwinds facing the economy by expanding his tariff measures in April. For the BOJ, the data are still likely to support a wait-and-see approach for now, particularly after it slashed its growth forecast for this year at the last policy meeting.BOJ officials remain highly vigilant about the tariff impact, with Governor Kazuo Ueda calling uncertainties “extremely high.” He warned last week that tariffs could affect Japan’s economy through multiple channels, pledging to evaluate economic and price developments through a broad array of indicators.
Most economists expect the central bank to delay further rate hikes, with a majority anticipating no change in the coming months. The BOJ next sets policy on June 17.
Japan is contending with a barrage of US tariffs, including a blanket 10% duty on its goods that will rise to 24% in early July barring a trade deal. Sector-specific levies are proving especially burdensome, most notably the 25% duties on automobiles and auto parts, which are eroding exporters’ profit margins.
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