Japan’s economic recovery suffered a blow at the end of last year and the current account deficit ballooned to a record in January, raising fears of a stumble in the world’s third-largest economy as activity wilts ahead of a sales tax increase in April.

In the fourth quarter of last year, Japan’s economy grew at an annual rate of just 0.7 per cent, revised figures show, slower than the initial estimate of 1 per cent on weaker business investment and consumption.

The slowdown from a revised 0.9 per cent pace in the previous three months bolsters expectations that the Bank of Japan may ease monetary policy further in coming months to safeguard a fragile recovery.

In a further negative sign for the export-reliant economy, the current account deficit widened to a record 1.589 trillion yen ($15.38 billion), easily exceeding a median estimate for a 1.4 trillion yen deficit as shipments failed to substantially pick up despite a weaker yen.

The disappointing data join a recent run of soft indicators that have raised doubts about Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s strategy to spark sustainable growth through massive monetary and fiscal stimulus, as well as structural reforms.

“Abenomics” helped the economy grow above an annual clip of 4 per cent in the first half of last year – the best among advanced economies – but growth slowed to below 1 per cent in the second half as exports, capital spending and private consumption lagged.

Yesterday’s data come as the BOJ kicked off a two-day policy review and amid growing expectations the central bank will further ease policy as early as next month to steer the economy through some speed bumps. While the BOJ is expected to stand pat today, analysts say policy makers will be concerned about the soft exports ahead of a planned increase in the sales tax to 8 per cent from the current 5 per cent on April 1.

“The fact that growth slowed sharply marks a failure of Abenomics that depends on the weak yen and the BOJ easing. But (the policies) have neither raised Japan’s growth trend nor improved its current account,” said Hir­omichi Shirakawa, of Credit Suisse in Tokyo.

“The BOJ may have no choice but to ease policy further by increasing risk asset purchases as early as in April, depending on market moves.

“It could justify such a move by reasoning that this fiscal year’s GDP is likely to undershoot its projection.”

Economists polled by Reuters last month expected the BOJ to ease policy further by this summer to shore up the economy as the effects from Abenomics begin to fade.

The central bank launched a massive burst of stimulus in April 2013 to defeat 15 years of chronic deflation and jump-start a long-stagnant economy, pledging to increase base money at an annual pace of 60-70 trillion yen ($590-$690 billion).

The economy is expected to perk up this current quarter as consumers frontload purchases before the tax hike, but some analysts worry that underlying growth is not robust and that more steps to bolster activity may be necessary.

“There are signs that the underlying trend for private consumption is not that strong. There are still a lot of doubts about the economy after the tax increase,” said Norio Miyagawa, senior economist at Mizuho Securities Research & Consulting Co.

The current account data showed exports rose 16.7 per cent in January from a year earlier, much slower than a 30.3 per cent annual increase in imports.

Sign up to our free newsletters

Get the best updates straight to your inbox:
Please select at least one mailing list.

You can unsubscribe at any time by clicking the link in the footer of our emails. We use Mailchimp as our marketing platform. By subscribing, you acknowledge that your information will be transferred to Mailchimp for processing.