Japan Slides Into Stagflation as Prices Surge and Economy Contracts
Japan has entered a stagflationary phase marked by accelerating inflation and shrinking economic output, a combination not seen in decades. The consumer price index excluding fresh food ROSE 3.5% year-over-year in April—the fifth consecutive month above 3%—while GDP contracted 0.7% in Q1 2025.
Food prices are leading the inflationary charge, with rice costs nearly doubling (98.4% YoY) at the fastest pace since 1971. Energy costs climbed 9.3% after the government rolled back utility subsidies, squeezing households facing both higher living expenses and weaker wage growth.
The economic downturn reflects broader Asian headwinds, with regional trade flows slowing and manufacturing activity cooling. Analysts warn the Bank of Japan faces a policy dilemma: tighten monetary policy to combat inflation or maintain stimulus to support growth.