Japan upgrades economic outlook
Japan expects exports to increase
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Japan's central bank has upgraded its economic outlook, saying the worst of the recession might be over.
The move came after the bank's two-day policy meeting, at which it opted to keep interest rates on hold at 0.1%.
While domestic demand is expected to remain low, the bank said exports, on which Japan is heavily reliant, were forecast to pick up.
Data on Thursday showed Japan's economy shrank in the first quarter at its fastest rate since records began.
Output contracted by 4% during the first three months of the year, or by 15.2% on an annual basis, as exports fell, according to official figures.
Recovering
"The pace of deterioration in the Japanese economy will likely moderate," the Bank of Japan said.
"Going forward, although domestic private demand is likely to continue to weaken, exports and production, after levelling out, are expected to start recovering and public investment to increase."
The latest outlook is more optimistic than the bank's forecast in April, when it said economic conditions had "deteriorated significantly".
While the bank did not provide new growth forecasts with numbers, it said it would expand the types of collateral on offer in order to encourage lending.