Japan’s economic expansion in Q1 was weaker than initially estimated, as a sharp downward revision to corporate investment offset improvements in consumption and trade. Revised government figures showed real GDP grew at an annualized 1.8% pace in January-March, down from the preliminary estimate of 2.1%, while quarter-on-quarter growth was revised from 0.51% to 0.45%.
The key drag came from business spending. Capital investment was revised from a 0.3% gain to a -0.7% contraction, raising questions about corporate confidence amid a broader environment of rising inflation and expectations for further Bank of Japan policy normalization. The downgrade also reduced nominal GDP growth to an annualized 2.5% from the previously reported 3.4%.
However, the overall picture was not uniformly weak. Consumer spending was revised higher to 0.35% growth from 0.27%, suggesting household demand remained supportive. Housing investment was also stronger than first reported, while exports rose 1.8%, slightly above the preliminary estimate. Together, the revisions point to an economy still expanding at a healthy pace, though one increasingly reliant on consumers and external demand rather than corporate investment.
| Indicator | Previous Estimate | Revised Estimate |
|---|---|---|
| Real GDP (Annualized) | 2.1% | 1.8% |
| Real GDP (Q/Q) | 0.51% | 0.45% |
| Capital Spending | +0.3% | -0.7% |
| Private Consumption | +0.27% | +0.35% |
| Public Investment | +1.4% | +1.5% |
| Housing Investment | +0.5% | +0.9% |
| Exports | +1.7% | +1.8% |
| Imports | +0.5% | +0.4% |
| Nominal GDP (Annualized) | +3.4% | +2.5% |




