Short answer - consumption. Gotta say I would not be surprised if consumption gives GDP a bigger-than-expected boost, I'd be shocked!
Still, here is the reasoning I've heard from a few (in a nutshell):
Japan's Cabinet Office Synthetic Consumption Index
- Attempts to synthesize consumption trends from demand-side statistics (Family Income and Expenditure Survey, etc.)
- It has shown a close fit with national accounts measure of private expenditure
In Q1 as a whole it rose at its fastest pace in 3 years (on the other hand is did slow in March), at 0.9% q/q
- which should contribute 0.5% to the GDP data
What to expect from Japan GDP? I posted on that here earlier, but to save you a click:
Japan kicks it off at 2350GMT with the first Q1 GDP estimate
- GDP (seasonally adjusted) for Q1, preliminary, q/q: expected 0.5%, prior 0.3%
- GDP Annualized (seasonally adjusted) for Q1, preliminary y/y: expected 1.7%, prior 1.2%
- GDP Nominal (seasonally adjusted), preliminary q/q: expected 0.1%, prior 0.4%
- GDP Deflator y/y, preliminary: expected -0.7%, prior -0.1%. The deflator is an inflation indicator. Ugh. Moving right along ....
- GDP Consumer Spending preliminary q/q, expected is 0.5%, prior was 0.0%
- GDP Business Spending preliminary q/q: expected -0.4%, prior was 2.0%