Kijun Times 는 교내 영어잡지,신문 동아리로 다양한 주제에 관한 이슈로 원고를 작성하며 영어 잡지를 만드는 동아리입니다.
매년 잡지 출판뿐만 아니라 자신의 진로와 관련된 개인기사, 모둠기사를 작성함으로써 영어 실력향상은 물론 주제에 제한이 없기 때문에 다양한 진로에 접목 가능합니다.
We are looking for a new journalist for The KIJUN TIMES.
Anyone can be a journalist for The KIJUN TIMES.
Japan posts strong growth ahead of sales tax rise. |
|||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
이름 | 김효진 | 등록일 | 14.05.17 | 조회수 | 862 |
Japan's economy grew at the fastest pace in nearly three years in the first quarter due to increased spending ahead of a sales tax increase on 1 April. Official data showed GDP rose 1.5% in the January-to-March period, against a revised 0.1% in the prior quarter. The figure beat forecasts for 1% growth, and was led by consumer spending which rose by 2.1%. Capital spending by businesses also outperformed, rising by 4.9%, which was more than double analyst expectations. Private consumption accounts for about 60% of Japan's economy. However, economists warned that spending may taper off now that the April tax hike has been introduced. "Japan's economy expanded rapidly ahead of the sales tax hike, but is set to slump thereafter," Marcel Thieliant, Japan economist at Capital Economics, said. "Looking ahead, the economy will certainly contract in the second quarter of the year, as consumers rein in spending after the tax hike, and residential investment is set to plunge." Trade deficitJapanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has been trying to revive growth in the world's third-largest economy. His policy of "Abenomics" has helped Japan's economy grow faster, but concerns remain about whether the recovery is durable. Analysts warn that Japan's huge trade deficit could pose a risk to growth. Data released on Monday showed that exports grew 6% quarter-on-quarter as a weaker yen made Japanese goods cheaper to overseas buyers. However, the weaker currency has also made imports more expensive for Japan, which has continued to buy vast quantities of foreign fuel to compensate for its lack of nuclear power. Bill Adams, senior international economist for PNC Financial Services Group, also expects an economic contraction in the second quarter. "Japan's imports continued to grow faster than exports in the first quarter, as they have in each of the preceding two quarters," he said. "Abenomics has boosted Japanese import demand more than the weaker yen is boosting Japan's exports."
From BBC |
이전글 | Will Russia's friendship with China work? |
---|---|
다음글 | Ex-mayor of 'corrupt' Florida town guilty of drug dealing |