TOKYO (Reuters) -Japan's exports in November fell for the first time in three months dragged down by China-bound chip shipments, underscoring worries that slowing overseas economies may deal another blow to the trade-reliant economy as domestic demand slows.
November exports fell 0.2% from the same month a year earlier, Ministry of Finance data showed on Wednesday. It was the first year-on-year decline in three months.
That compared with a 1.5% rise expected by economists in a Reuters poll. It followed a 1.6% rise in October.
Weak exports are a source of concern for Japanese policymakers who are hoping that external demand could help counter weak domestic consumption.
Japan's economy contracted a faster-than-expected annualised 2.9% in the third quarter as capital expenditures and consumption — key drivers of domestic demand — slumped.
Exports to China put a drag on overall shipments including items such as chips, with food shipments falling 60% due in part to Beijing's ban on Japanese seafood and some other produce. China-bound food exports fell to 8.6 billion yen ($59.8 million) in November, the lowest amount since January.
Imports fell 11.9% in the year to November, versus the median estimate for an 8.6% decrease.
The trade balance came to a deficit of 776.9 billion yen ($5.40 billion), versus the median estimate for a 962.4 billion yen shortfall.
($1 = 143.8700 yen)
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