2026-05-12
Japan's Q1 Household Spending Decline Widens to 2.9%, Fourth Consecutive Drop Highlights Weak Consumption Recovery
Japan's newly released average monthly real household spending for the first quarter of 2026 (March) reported a year-on-year growth rate of -2.9%, worsening further from the previous month's -1.8% and falling far below the analysts' consensus expectation of -1.3%. This data marks a record of four consecutive months of decline, indicating that under prolonged upward pressure on prices, Japan's domestic end-consumer demand continues to face severe challenges.
Breaking down the detailed data, the public's frugality awareness is broadly reflected across various daily necessities. Among them, food expenditure saw a year-on-year decline of 2.9% (previous value was -0.5%), utility expenditure dropped by 3.2%, and clothing expenditure also turned from positive to negative, falling by 2.6%. Although expenditures in housing, healthcare, and education showed slight growth, the overall consumption basket remains constrained by the compression of core living costs, leading to a seasonally adjusted month-on-month decline of 1.3%, reversing the 1.5% growth trend of the previous month.
Exploring the primary reasons for this sharp plunge in consumption data, it is mainly attributed to imported inflation brought about by high energy prices and the depreciation of the yen. Market analysis points out that although large Japanese corporations have raised wages by about 5% for the third consecutive year, and nominal wage growth has outpaced inflation, geopolitical conflicts in the Middle East have driven up oil prices, exacerbating public concerns about worsening future inflation. With real purchasing power failing to see a noticeable improvement, consumer confidence recorded its largest drop in nearly six years, consequently leading to substantial cuts in non-essential spending.
Looking ahead, Japan's consumer market will remain under pressure in the short-to-medium term (1 to 2 months). Persistently high oil prices and a weak yen will continue to drive up corporate production costs; if these costs are passed on to end products, it will further suppress household willingness to consume. However, extending the outlook to the medium term (3 to 6 months), as the benefits of the "Shunto" (spring wage offensive) wage hikes gradually spread to small and medium-sized enterprises and the broader labor market, if wage growth can stably and consistently outpace inflation, coupled with the Bank of Japan's (BOJ) potential monetary policy normalization measures helping to stabilize the exchange rate, Japan's real consumption momentum is expected to usher in an opportunity to bottom out and rebound in the second half of the year.
https://www.home.saxo/en-sg/content/articles/macro/asia-market-quick-take-12-may-2026-12052026
https://hk.epochtimes.com/news/2026-05-12/67534414
https://www.binance.com/zh-CN/square/post/322158643005538