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TOKYO (REUTERS) – Japanese mother of three Maiko Takahashi was never one to pinch pennies or accept hand-me-downs for her children even though circumstances for her single-income family have always been fairly modest.

But times have changed. Nowadays, she has no trouble with used clothes and her pursuit of bargains and scrimping on the most trifling costs borders on the obsessive.

“I’ve started to pay close attention to tips on TV shows, like minimising the number of times you open the fridge to save electricity,” said Takahashi, whose family of five lives in suburbs north of Tokyo.

“We’ve started to feel the pinch going about things the usual way so I’ve made adjustments.” Takahashi’s behaviour is mirrored by a growing number of consumers and underlines a worrying trend for Japan.

After lifting two years of on-and-off coronavirus curbs in March, the government was counting on what’s known as “revenge spending”, pent-up demand triggering a splurge that boosts consumption and a moribund economy, as has been seen in the United States, China and some other major economies.

But with energy, food and other living costs soaring – exacerbated in recent months by a sharp decline in the yen and the war in Ukraine – those hopes are fading fast.

Facing the prospect of struggling with rising prices, Japan’s famously thrifty consumers are tightening their belts even as they sit on the remains of an estimated 50 trillion yen (S$530 billion) – equivalent to 9 per cent of the economy – in “forced savings”, as the Bank of Japan calls it, accrued during the pandemic.

Some bigger companies have answered a government call to raise wages but the gains of some 2 per cent will be swallowed up by higher prices of everything from flour, to diapers and beer, economists say.

In March, electricity prices in resources-poor Japan jumped 22 per cent from the previous year – the most in more than four decades.

The government recently upgraded its assessment of the economy for the first time in four months, citing an expected recovery in spending, but added a caveat that the outlook was clouded.

“The chance of a ‘revenge spending’ burst is becoming smaller than we had expected,” a government official said in unusually candid remarks, noting that prospects were especially uncertain beyond the summer.

Final feast

With more than 90 per cent of consumers saying in the latest government survey that they expected everyday goods to become more expensive over the next 12 months, economists say it is no surprise to see behaviour like Takahashi’s.

In addition to accepting used uniforms for her son entering kindergarten, and venturing further in search of discounts, the stay-at-home-mum said she has switched to lower-cost private brands (PB) for mayonnaise, ketchup and other food.

She’s not alone. The share of so-called PB items for mayonnaise purchases nationwide rose to 22 per cent in March from 18 per cent a year earlier, according to market research firm Intage Inc.

Supermarket giant Aeon Co saw PB food sales jump 15 per cent in the six months to February.

The “Golden Week” holiday, which began on Friday, is the first in three years without Covid-19 restrictions, and the economy should see a dramatic improvement in spending but that is likely to be the high point for consumption this year, said Daiwa Securities senior economist Toru Suehiro.

“The full-fledged impact of rising costs will emerge in the July to September quarter and later, so the Golden Week will probably be the last feast of the year,” he said.

The number of holiday travellers is expected to grow about 70 per cent from last year, but still a third short of pre-pandemic levels, according to JTB Corp, Japan’s biggest travel agency.

The yen’s fall to two-decade lows would normally be a boon for in-bound travellers, but Japan, fearing Covid-19, has kept its borders closed to tourists. In 2019, almost 32 million foreign tourists contributed to the economy.

Meanwhile, the weak yen has caused pain for many companies by increasing input costs, making them just as cautious as consumers – and reluctant to raise wages.

“Prices keep rising and rising for items we can’t live without, while salaries are flat,” Takahashi said.

“I’m constantly racking my brains over what I can skimp on next.”