Research Briefing | Feb 28, 2022

Impact of falling terms of trade on Japan’s growth and deflation

report - Japan - Impact of falling terms of trade on growth and deflationJapan’s terms of trade, which saw steady deterioration until the mid 2010s, have since trended sideways, albeit with substantial fluctuation. The decline reflects Japan’s extreme dependence on imported resources and a drop in export prices amid intensifying global competition.

What you will learn:

  • Deteriorating terms of trade has been one of the sources of Japan’s long-term growth stagnation and disinflation. Worsening trading gains have steadily driven down real gross domestic income (GDI) further from already stagnant gross domestic production (GDP).
  • From 2005 to 2012, the terms of trade drove down a GDP deflator sharply, delaying a return to positive growth even after the economy had completed the balance-sheet adjustment following the bursting of Japan’s bubbles.
  • GDI has been squeezed again due to last year’s commodity price rise, and a GDP deflator continued to decline in 2021. Should commodity prices remain high, the risk of Japan falling into a deflationary trap will become elevated.

Back to Resource Hub

Related research

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

Post

BoJ likely to end zero interest rates in autumn

As expected, the BoJ maintained its policy rate at 0%-0.1% at Friday's meeting. With more confidence on the ongoing wage-driven inflation dynamics and a strong appetite for policy normalisation, the BoJ looks more likely to end its zero-interest rate policy in the autumn.

Find Out More