Research Briefing | Nov 30, 2021

Japan transforming from a goods to a capital exporter

Japan: Transforming from a goods to a capital exporter

Japan has been a country with a persistent current account surplus since the 1980s. By breaking down the current account balance, though, we can see that primary income – mostly consisting of income from foreign investments – replaced the goods trade as the main source of the surplus in the mid-2000s. In this sense, we can argue that Japan today has become an exporter of capital, rather than a goods exporter.

What you will learn:

  • Japan’s primary income-led current account surplus is unique among major economies, according to our analysis. For most countries, the current account surplus/deficit is usually driven by the goods trade balance.
  • Net-positive primary income is generated by both Japan’s portfolio investments and direct investments. With the importance of the latter increasing, reinforced by a surge in assets and a higher rate of return, we see primary income continuing to sustain Japan’s current account surplus.
Back to Resource Hub

Related Services

Post

Relative return index signals improving CRE attractiveness

Our latest global relative return index (RRI) signals that risk-adjusted investment opportunities in commercial real estate (CRE) should start to emerge this year before becoming more widespread in 2025. At this point, our baseline expected returns move higher than required returns, pushing the global all-property index above the 50 mark.

Find Out More

Post

South Africa: Elections 2024 | ‘ANC & friends’ election scenario

This Research Briefing sets out the first of four scenarios for South Africa's general election on May 29. In this scenario, the ANC wins over 46% of the vote share at the national level, and forms a government by working with small, constituency-based parties.

Find Out More