Japan to spend $113bn to fight inflation

News Image

MG News | November 02, 2023 at 12:21 PM GMT+05:00

November 02, 2023 (MLN): Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida said on Thursday the government will spend over 17 trillion yen ($113 billion) on a package of measures to cushion the economic blow from inflation, which will include tax cuts, as Reuters reported.

To fund part of the spending, the government will compile a supplementary budget for the current fiscal year of 13.1tr yen, Kishida told reporters.

Including spending by local governments and state-backed loans, the size of the package will total 21.8 trillion yen.

"Japan's economy is seeing a big opportunity open up to shift to a new stage for the first time in three decades," as it exits from a deflationary spiral, Kishida told a meeting of government and ruling party executives on Thursday.

"That's why we need to help companies boost profitability and earn revenues to boost wages," he said.

Inflation, fueled by rising costs of raw materials, has kept above the central bank's target of 2% for more than a year, weighing on consumption and clouding the outlook for an economy making a delayed recovery from scars left by COVID-19.

The rising cost of living is partly blamed for pushing down Kishida's approval ratings, piling pressure on the prime minister to take steps to ease the pain on households.

With increases in wages proving too slow to offset rising prices, Kishida had said the government would cushion the blow by returning to households some of the expected increase in tax revenues generated by solid economic growth.

Analysts, however, doubt whether the roughly 5 trillion yen to be spent on tax cuts and payouts would do much to boost consumption and Japan's economic growth.

Takahide Kiuchi, a former Bank of Japan board member who is currently an economist at Nomura Research Institute, expects the measures to lift gross domestic product (GDP) by just 0.19% for the year.

"It's a policy that isn't very cost-effective," he said. "With Japan's output gap having turned positive in April-June, the economy does not need a stimulus package in the first place."

Japan's economy expanded an annualized 4.8% in the second quarter, the biggest increase in more than two years, as an end to COVID-19 pandemic curbs boosted consumption.

However, falling real wages in July adds to doubts over central bank projections that domestic demand can keep the country on a steady recovery path.

Copyright Mettis Link News

Related News

Name Price/Vol %Chg/NChg
KSE100 173,962.82
313.69M
1.30%
2237.52
ALLSHR 104,178.62
550.40M
0.93%
964.13
KSE30 52,166.33
164.58M
1.26%
649.19
KMI30 250,496.48
141.11M
1.59%
3930.77
KMIALLSHR 67,844.06
318.73M
1.20%
801.29
BKTi 47,430.11
44.68M
0.28%
130.40
OGTi 36,386.96
9.01M
0.13%
45.59
Symbol Bid/Ask High/Low
Name Last High/Low Chg/%Chg
BITCOIN FUTURES 74,120.00 74,260.00
73,715.00
405.00
0.55%
BRENT CRUDE 91.89 92.95
89.93
-0.81
-0.87%
RICHARDS BAY COAL MONTHLY 117.00 0.00
0.00
-0.75
-0.64%
ROTTERDAM COAL MONTHLY 130.25 131.75
130.00
-0.20
-0.15%
USD RBD PALM OLEIN 1,157.50 1,157.50
1,157.50
0.00
0.00%
CRUDE OIL - WTI 87.76 89.02
86.35
-1.14
-1.28%
SUGAR #11 WORLD 14.07 14.35
13.90
0.14
1.01%

Chart of the Day


Latest News
May 31, 2026 at 10:59 AM GMT+05:00

Triple crown for Arif Habib Limited


May 31, 2026 at 10:10 AM GMT+05:00

Key Pakistan Market Stats and Economic Indicators


May 30, 2026 at 04:31 PM GMT+05:00

Weekly Market Roundup


May 29, 2026 at 09:44 PM GMT+05:00

SBP reserves rise $66m to $17.15bn



Top 5 things to watch in this week

Pakistan Stock Movers
Name Last Chg/%Chg
Name Last Chg/%Chg