economics
Japan worker household recreational goods spending, 1975–2008
Expenditure peaked at 7,645 yen in 1999 after decades of growth, then eased to 7,030 yen by 2008, signaling a shift in post-bubble spending priorities
ASIA · DAILY · POST
Portal Site of Official Statistics of Japan website (https://www.e-stat.go.jp/). from Japan Recreational goods outlays by Japanese worker households reached a 7,645-yen peak in 1999, more than 2.
ASIA · DAILY · POST
8 times the 1975 figure, before settling at 7,030 yen in 2008, according to the Statistics Bureau's family budget survey.
ASIA · DAILY · POST
The ascent to 1999 Spending rose almost every year from 2,719 yen in 1975 to that 1999 high, with particularly sharp jumps in the late 1980s and early 1990s.
ASIA · DAILY · POST
By 1990 the figure had already crossed 6,766 yen , and it continued climbing through the decade even as the broader economy cooled.
ASIA · DAILY · POST
Where the series began The lowest recorded outlay came at the start of the data in 1975 at 2,719 yen . Thirty-four years of observations show a compound shift, with an average spend of 5,961 yen over the entire run.
ASIA · DAILY · POST
Post-peak softening After 1999, recreational goods expenditure drifted generally downward, dipping to 6,693 yen in 2006 before a slight recovery to 7,030 yen in 2008.
ASIA · DAILY · POST
The pattern is consistent with long-term household budget reprioritisation during Japan's prolonged low-growth stretch.
ASIA · DAILY · POST
Peak year: 1999 at 7,645 yen Lowest year: 1975 at 2,719 yen 2008 close: 7,030 yen, 8 percent below the peak Series average: 5,961 yen across 34 annual observations Overall growth: Spending in 2008 was roughly 2.
ASIA · DAILY · POST
Read the full story
Continue on AsiaDailyPost.com

Continue reading on AsiaDailyPost

Expenditure peaked at 7,645 yen in 1999 after decades of growth, then eased to 7,030 yen by 2008, signaling a shift in post-bubble spending priorities.

TAP UP TO READ FULL ARTICLE