The Cabinet Office numbers give a more dismal view than the earlier report that had said
The world's third-largest economy has struggled ever since the March 11 tsunami and earthquake, which left 20,000 people missing or dead, disrupted supply chains among the small-business suppliers in the northeast and forced companies to cut back on power usage because of a nuclear power plant that went into meltdown.
The government said capital expenditure during the three months through June contracted 0.9 percent annual rate. The preliminary report had said it had risen 0.2 percent.
Satoshi Osanai, economist at Daiwa Institute of Research in
``These negative results reflect the one-time disaster, and so we still think conditions are turning better in a recovery,'' he said. ``This is not going to be like Lehman shock when things kept getting worse.''
Government stimulus spending, designed to help along recovery efforts in northeastern
The disaster hit at a time when
Exports, corporate investment and consumer spending have all been falling in recent months.
Even as companies restore production, a surging yen, which has recently tested record highs against the dollar, is a major problem for