Confidence surges at manufacturers
Confidence among Japan's large manufacturers rose to the highest since the early stages of the global credit crisis in 2007, as Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe readies steps to cushion the economy from an increase in the sales tax.

Confidence among Japan's large manufacturers rose to the highest since the early stages of the global credit crisis in 2007, as Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe readies steps to cushion the economy from an increase in the sales tax.
The quarterly tankan index for big manufacturers rose to 12 last month from four in June, the Bank of Japan said yesterday. That exceeded the median estimate of seven by 30 economists surveyed.
The sentiment gain follows a 21 per cent slide in the yen against the US dollar in the past year that has made exporters more competitive.
"The tankan is a tailwind for the Abe administration and the plan to increase the sales tax," said Yoshimasa Maruyama, chief economist at Itochu in Tokyo. "The survey showed improvement across many sectors, both in manufacturing and non-manufacturing. The stronger-than-expected improvements in business confidence prove Japan is recovering."
The data adds to evidence of strength in the world's third-largest economy after the government revised up second-quarter growth on September 9.
While the survey showed smaller companies remained downbeat, many saw improvement from three months ago. The index for small manufacturers gained to minus nine from minus 14. That for small non-manufacturers increased to minus one from minus four, the highest since 1992.