zy_ZY
Algeria
Argentina
Australia
Austria
Belgium


COFACE WEST AFRICA BENIN
47-48 Quartier Guinkomey
7565 Cotonou 01

Tel./Fax: + 229 21 31 65 89
e-mail: commercial_bn@coface.com

Benin
Brazil
Bulgaria

COFACE WEST AFRICA BURKINA FASO 
Secteur 05, 1268, avenue Kwamé N'Krumah
01 BP 3240 Ouagadougou
Tel./Fax: +226 50 33 01 13

Cell.: +226 70 28 30 68
e-mail: coface_westafrica@coface.com
Office manager: djeneba_ouedraogo@coface.com
Managing director: philippe_hoeblich@coface.com
Burkina Faso


COFACE SERVICES WEST AFRICA CAMEROON

Imm. BICEC - 4ème étage
Avenue de Gaulle Bonanjo
BP 18342 Douala
Tel.: +237 33 42 51 53
Fax.: +237 33 42 00 96

Cameroon
Canada
Chile
China
Colombia
Costa Rica
Croatia
Czech Republic
Denmark
Ecuador
Egypt
Estonia
France



COFACE GABON SERVICES
Immeuble DIAMANT
2è étage
BP 1070
Libreville
Tel. : + 241 05 03 69 05
Fax : + 241 76 13 50
Email : coface_westafrica@coface.com

Gabon
Germany



COFACE GHANA

Ghana
Hong Kong
Hungary
India
Ireland
Israel
Italy

COFACE SICR COTE D'IVOIRE
2 Cocody Plateaux
Lot n°85 Ilot 9
18 Abidjan
Tel.:+ 225 22 41 49 68
Fax.:+ 225 22 41 48 49
Ivory Coast
Japan
Latvia
Lithuania
Luxembourg

COFACE SERVICES MALAYSIA SDN BHD
CP 17, Suite 1304 13th Floor,
Central Plaza, 34 Jalan Sultan Ismail
50250 Kuala Lumpur
Tel.:+60 (3)  2141 3380
Fax.:+60 (3) 2141 3381
e-mail:
enquiries@coface.com.my
Malaysia



COFACE WEST AFRICA MALI
Imm. Dramane Kouma
Av Cheick Zahed
BP E 4770 Bamako
Tel./Fax : +22 32 29 26 45

Mali
Mexico
Morocco
Netherlands

COFACE NORWAY
Postboks 2006 Vika
0125 Oslo

Norway
Peru
Poland
Portugal
Romania
Russian Fed.


COFACE SICR SENEGAL

43, rue Albert Sarraut
Immeuble AGS Parchappe
BP 12454 Dakar
Tel: +221 33 823 69 92
Fax.: +221 33 842 08 87

Senegal
Serbia
Singapore
Slovakia
Slovenia
South Africa


COFACE SERVICES KOREA CO LTD
Kyobo Life Insurance Bldg. 9F
1 Jongno 1-ga, Jongno-gu
Seoul 110-714
Tel.:+82 (0)2 2088 7401 
Fax.:+82 (0)2 2088 7474
e-mail: jinhak_ryu@coface.com

South Korea
Spain
Sweden
Switzerland
Taiwan


COFACE HOLDING (THAILAND) CO LTD
622 Emporium Tower, 22th Floor
Sukhumvit 24, 
Klongtoey
10110 Bangkok
Tel.: +66 (02) 664 89 89
Fax.: +66 (02) 664 89 98
e-mail: marketing_thailand@coface.com

Thailand


COFACE WEST AFRICA TOGO
22, Boulevard de la Paix
Immeuble ERAD
Quartier Super TACO
BP 899 Lomé
Tel./Fax: +228 220 89 58

Togo
Turkey
UAE
Ukraine
United Kingdom
United States

COFACE VIETNAM SERVICES

Suite 1719, 17th floor, Gemadept Tower,
N°6, Le Thanh Ton Street, 1st District
Ho Chi Minh City
Tel: +84 8 62 556 928
Fax: +84 8 62 556 801
e-mail: coface_vietnam@coface.com 

Vietnam

Japan


Population 127.611 million

GDP 5984.39 US$ billion

@rating
countryA1

Business climate
assessmentA1

Japan Download or print this country file Bookmark and share



Major macro economic indicators
 201020112012(e)2013(f)
GDP growth (%)

4.5

-0.7

2

0.7

Inflation (yearly average) (%)

-0.7

-0.3

0

 0.3

Budget balance (% GDP)

-8.4

-9.3

-9.9

-10.5

Current account balance (% GDP)

 3.7

2

0.9

0.7

Public debt (% GDP)

192.7

205.3

219.8

229.1

 
(e) Estimate (f) Forecast

STRENGTHS

  • Exclusive geographic position in a dynamic region
  • Very high national savings level (around 23% of GDP)
  • 90% of public debt held by domestic investors
  • More favourable yen’s exchange rate due to new monetary easing


WEAKNESSES

  • Government instability (seven prime ministers in seven years)
  • Worsening public finances
  • Decline in economically active population and growing proportion of workers without job security
  • Low productivity of SMEs
  • Uncertainties over the nuclear question



Risk assessment

 

All economic drivers set to slow in 2013

With the exception of foreign trade, all components of growth contributed positively to activity in 2012. Despite the new elected government’s fiscal stimulus targeted at households (but still to be voted by the Diet), private spending will stall in 2013. However, a hike in the consumption tax from 5% to 10% between 2014 and 2015, if actually implemented, could push Japanese consumers to spend more towards the end of 2013, to the detriment of their savings. This, in conjunction with the new 2 percent inflation target set by the Bank of Japan, would enable deflationary pressures to be contained, in a context of rising prices for imported energy to replace that provided by the 52 nuclear power plants, which were still shut in late 2012 and which had guaranteed 30% of the electricity supply. After adopting the budget allocations (4% of GDP over several years) for reconstruction of the regions devastated by the disasters of 2011, public investment is likely to slow. However, the funds allocated will continue to slowly permeate through to the economy and provide many companies with support, without, though, triggering a private investment boom. There are at least three reasons for this: pending radioactivity issue in the disaster region, insufficient manpower in the construction companies to respond to demand and resistance by local populations to economic and social redeployment. Moreover, the measures decided by Shinzo Abe’s government in order to boost domestic demand, are to be considered in a context of high level of fiscal deficit and public debt.


Considerable uncertainties over exports

All or some of the factors that put pressure on Japanese exports in 2012 are likely to last. Among those definitely set to remain are the recessions in the eurozone’s peripheral countries and subdued growth in its core countries – the European Union represents 12% of outlets. The yen should depreciate in 2013 thanks to the BoJ’s unconventional monetary easing but it is likely to experience some volatility. Among the uncertainties, those relating to the territorial conflict with China over the Senkaku-Diaoyu islands are worrying, as China accounts for nearly 20% of Japanese exports. Even if we can assume China will gradually lift the boycott on Japanese goods, exports of intermediary industrial products to China (20% of total sales) are likely to continue to suffer from the indirect impact of decelerating European demand for finished Chinese products which incorporate intermediate Japanese goods. Finally, the fiscal adjustment conducted by the United States, could more or less affect sales to the States (16%), depending on the scale of tax rises and spending cuts that will be agreed upon. Subject to an easing of geopolitical tensions with China, exports are expected to rise slightly, but not enough to enable external trade to contribute positively to growth, as imports will remain sustained by purchases of energy to replace the lost nuclear power.


Companies weakened by higher electricity tariffs and slower demand

The use of imported energy resources has increased production costs in the Archipelago, while the price of electricity was already high by international standards. The decision to authorise an average electricity price increase of 10% since July 2012 has been a weakening factor for businesses, but especially for large consumers like the electric steelmaking arc furnaces. Meanwhile, the slowdown in world demand is likely to continue to affect the mechanical engineering and semi-conductor sectors. Sales of household appliances were hit by the ending of subsidies and printing companies by very tough competition, which squeezed their margins. The losses announced by the largest manufacturers are expected to cascade down to their sub-contractors. This context is likely to impact on the activities of banks, whose profits are being eroded by low interest rates, while demand for credit remains subdued. So, in 2013 certain regional banks could undergo difficulties associated with deteriorating solvency among the SME’s, whose debt banks have already restructured. Nonetheless, for the moment, the number of company bankruptcies is stable. This is reflected by the Coface payment incident index, which still follows a favourable trend.


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