"Japan prepares record fiscal stimulus
By Michiyo Nakamoto in Tokyo
Published: April 7 2009 03:00 | Last updated: April 7 2009 03:00
Japan's prime minister told his government yesterday to prepare a record fiscal stimulus package to lift the world's second-biggest economy from its deepening gloom, with real spending exceeding 2 per cent of gross domestic product or more than Y10,000bn.
Taro Aso told Kaoru Yosano, the finance and economy minister, to work on a stimulus plan focused mainly on five key issues: a new social safety net for non-regular workers, full use of government financial institutions to ease the credit crunch, a big expansion of solar energy, improvements to healthcare and medical services, and subsidies to local governments for the revitalisation of regional economies.
The government plans to unveil details of the package on Friday, and aims to submit necessary legislation to the Diet before the Golden Week holidays in late April and early May.
Japan has already implemented a range of stimulus measures totalling Y12,000bn ($119bn) in actual government spending under Mr Aso to combat the impact of the global recession,as recommended by the International Monetary Fund.
However, the Japanese economy has remained under severe stress, with exports plunging by record amounts over the past few months.
GDP fell by 3.3 per cent quarter on quarter in the last three months of 2008, and the most recent business sentiment survey by the Bank of Japan, released last week, showed that optimism had deteriorated to a record low.
The measures come amid mounting suggestions that Mr Aso may be preparing for a general election.
The prime minister must call an election for the powerful lower house of parliament by the end of September. But popular discontent with his ruling Liberal Democratic party has made the timing of the election difficult for him.
The latest stimulus package "stops things from getting worse . . . [but] it doesn't necessarily make things better", said John Richards, head of research at Royal Bank of Scotland in Tokyo.
The gap between Japan's potential and actual output was about Y20,000bn, so the government was filling about half of that, said Mr Richards. "It's big [but] it certainly isn't too much."
The measures to provide a safety net for non-regular workers and to improve medical and healthcare services were likely to be effective in stimulating economic activity, although "the devil is in the details", he said.
However, measures to support local government to revitalise regional economies could end up simply increasing unnecessary public works projects, said Masaaki Kanno, the chief economist at JPMorgan in Tokyo.
"Japan has been doing the same things since the 1990s. They should do things that they can't normally do, which require strong leadership," said Mr Kanno.
In addition to the five pillars of the new stimulus package, the LDP is finalising proposals for a temporary relaxation of Japan's so-called gift tax, which is aimed at spurring a transfer of wealth from older to younger people.
The LDP is proposing to increase the amount that is exempt from the gift tax if wealth transferred from the older to younger generation is used to buy real estate.
www.ft.com/asia-pacific
Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2009"


































No comments:
Post a Comment