Monday, December 20, 2010

The Bank of Japan said manufacturing production
had weakened
Japan has kept its key interest rate at between zero and 0.1% as policymakers continue to try to bolster the country's fragile economic recovery.

The central bank warned that the recovery "seems to be pausing".

Japan has been suffering from a strong yen, weak exports and almost two years of falling prices.

Last month, the government passed a $61bn (£39bn) stimulus package, the latest in a series of measures designed to boost the economy by creating jobs.

The Bank of Japan also said it would consider taking further steps to aid the recovery.

It said that while the economy was showing signs of "moderate recovery", it would "continue to carefully examine the outlook for economic activity and prices, and take policy action in an appropriate manner".

The bank also warned that business sentiment and private consumption for some goods had weakened, while manufacturing production had declined.
Weak exports

Japan's economy expanded at an annual pace of 4.5% between July and September, but many economists attribute this relatively strong growth to one-off factors

Most expect growth to be weaker in the final three months of the year.

One reason is weakened exports, which have taken a double hit from weakening demand overseas and a stronger yen, which makes exports more expensive.

Japan has also suffered 20 straight months of falling prices - known as deflation - which stifles economic growth by undermining consumer demand.

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