. Earth Science News .
POLITICAL ECONOMY
Japan business confidence dives after quake: BoJ

by Staff Writers
Tokyo (AFP) April 4, 2011
Japanese business confidence in the outlook for the next three months has plunged following the March 11 earthquake-tsunami and subsequent nuclear crisis, the Bank of Japan said Monday.

The central bank re-released Friday's quarterly Tankan survey to show the breakdown in the replies it received before and after the disasters.

With most of the responses from companies received before March 11, the survey does not fully reflect the impact of the quake.

But responses from firms received after the tragedy show a sharply divergent view after the 9.0 magnitude earthquake damaged factories, caused power power shortages and led to major disruption to supply chains.

The BoJ's report on Friday showed business sentiment among large manufacturers improving to "six" in March from "five" in December, but only 23.6 percent of responses were received after March 11.

Monday's survey illustrated the views of firms polled after the quake, which showed the sentiment index among those major manufacturers fall to "minus two" for the April-June period.

The index measures the percentage of firms that say conditions are good minus those that say conditions are bad -- meaning that any figure above zero indicates general, if cautious, optimism in the corporate sector.

The central bank considers the Tankan a key source of information when formulating monetary policy, but the March survey may not be the best indicator as most responses were received before the earthquake.

"The data don't probably include companies in regions hit by the quake and tsunami and thus are less useful to see the accurate state of the economy," Akiyoshi Takumori of Sumitomo Mitsui Asset Management told Dow Jones Newswires.

The March 11 disasters killed 12,020 people and left 15,512 missing, according to the latest national police count, with swathes of the northeast coast destroyed in a tsunami that erased entire towns.

Japan has said the cost of rebuilding after the twin disasters could hit 25 trillion yen ($309 billion).

The estimate does not account for wider issues such as how radiation from the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant, which was crippled by the quake, will affect food and water supply, amid an ongoing contamination scare.

Aside from direct damage and disruption caused, Japan's companies also faced a volatile yen following the earthquake.

The Japanese unit soared to a post World War II high of 76.25 to the dollar on bets on an influx of capital by Japanese companies to aid reconstruction efforts.

A strong yen makes exporters' goods more expensive overseas and erodes companies' repatriated profits.

The Ministry of Finance, using the Bank of Japan as its agent, stepped into the market on March 18 after G7 nations agreed on a rare joint intervention to weaken the currency, which on Monday was trading at around 84 to the dollar.

The BoJ also doubled its asset-purchase programme to 10 trillion yen in the aftermath of the earthquake and pumped record funds into the financial system in a bid to soothe jittery markets.

Japan's manufacturing activity fell to its lowest reading for two years following the March 11 disaster, a survey by a private research firm showed last week.

And domestic sales of new cars, trucks and buses dropped 37 percent from a year earlier last month, as production and supplies to auto dealers were hit.



Share This Article With Planet Earth
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit
YahooMyWebYahooMyWeb GoogleGoogle FacebookFacebook



Related Links
The Economy



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


POLITICAL ECONOMY
Obama, Republicans seek spending cut endgame
Washington (AFP) April 3, 2011
President Barack Obama and his Republican foes, spurred on by archconservatives irate over gaping deficits, have until Friday to agree on what may be the deepest spending cuts in US history. Key Democratic and Republican lawmakers, joined by top Obama aides, are inching privately towards a deal to fund the government to October 1 and avert a partial federal shutdown triggered when a short-te ... read more







POLITICAL ECONOMY
Japan uses colour dye to trace nuclear leak

US studies Fukushima disaster for safety lessons

Japan PM tells nuclear workers 'you can't lose this battle'

Japan PM vows help in first tour of tsunami zone

POLITICAL ECONOMY
New Laser Technology Could Revolutionize Communications

Japan dumps low-level radioactive water into sea

'Skype school' brings knowledge to Indian village

Waste Ash From Coal Could Save Billions In Repairing US Bridges And Roads

POLITICAL ECONOMY
First Broad-Scale Maps Of Life On The Sea-Shelf

Police, protesters clash over China dam

Dolphin toll from BP oil spill far higher: study

ADB and OPEC Fund aid Sierra Leone water project

POLITICAL ECONOMY
Antarctic Icebergs Play A Previously Unknown Role In Global Carbon Cycle, Climate

Study Sheds Light On How Heat Is Transported To Greenland Glaciers

Large-Scale Assessment Of Arctic Ocean Show Significant Increase In Freshwater Content

Study: 2011 arctic ice extent is down

POLITICAL ECONOMY
Wine tasters swoon over Bordeaux's 'liquid beauty'

Half China's dairies shut in safety audit: govt

David vs Goliath fight in Ecuador's banana industry

Improve Crop Yield By Removing Manure Solids

POLITICAL ECONOMY
Lone pine tree symbol of hope in Japan tsunami city

Climate Modelling And The Rain

Deep-Sea Volcanoes Explode

A mother's search in post-tsunami Japan

POLITICAL ECONOMY
Ivory Coast opposition blockade lifted, police desert: UN

A New Scramble For African Riches - Its Consumers

Africa turns to cellphones for better health

Sudan president heads to Qatar amid Darfur violence

POLITICAL ECONOMY
Parody blooms on Twitter

Chatting babies video a YouTube sensation

Research Proves No 2 Of Us Are Alike, Even Identical Twins

Researchers Detail How Neurons Decide How To Transmit Information


The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2010 - SpaceDaily. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement