Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi said in an interview broadcast yesterday that his government would come up with concrete steps in October to speed up banks' disposal of bad loans.
The move follows the Bank of Japan's announcement last week that it would take the unprecedented step of buying stocks directly from banks to protect them from market turbulence.
"The Bank of Japan cannot do it all alone," Koizumi said in a Fuji Television Network interview taped Friday afternoon.
"I would like the government to take one more step in October, to come up with concrete measures to speed up disposal of bad loans and restore health to financial institutions," he said.
Koizumi said the step would "be supportive of the bank's move, which was enacted so there would be no more anxiety over stock prices."
The premier put a high priority on the problem of bad loans, which weighed down banks to the tune of ?43.2 trillion (US$366 billion) in March, rather than on Japan's falling prices, with consumer prices down year-on-year in July for the 35th consecutive month.
"If bad-loan disposals don't proceed, banks will not start productively lending money," he said.
When the interviewer pressed Koizumi for concrete measures immediately and said market participants were expecting them, the premier said: "It's too fast for concrete measures. We can't rush into things."
Koizumi reiterated a pledge to cut taxes by more than ?1 trillion in the fiscal year to March 2005, to be balanced with tax increases perhaps in the future.
"I think the direction of the tax reform will come out in October and November. And even though tax reform is to be enacted in fiscal 2003 [starting next April], an early tax cut could come as early as next January," he said.
The prime minister, who returned from a landmark one-day summit in North Korea on Tuesday, left for Copenhagen on Saturday to attend the Asia-Europe Meeting and will not head back to Japan until Wednesday.
Some critics have hit Koizumi for putting domestic economic policies on the back burner in favor of poll-boosting foreign policy excursions.
On Wednesday, the Bank of Japan took the policy lead by declaring it would buy stocks directly from banks to reduce their exposure to the market. Media reports said the amount could be as large as ?4 trillion.
The move came as Japan's top ministers also debated, sometimes in contradiction with each other, whether banks need a public injection of funds to restore their fiscal health. With a cabinet re-shuffle discussion set on the heels of Koizumi's return from Copenhagen, the prime minister said he would settle the debate.
"It seems as if opinions are different but I will coordinate them," he said.
Three experts in the high technology industry have said that US President Donald Trump’s pledge to impose higher tariffs on Taiwanese semiconductors is part of an effort to force Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電) to the negotiating table. In a speech to Republicans on Jan. 27, Trump said he intends to impose tariffs on Taiwan to bring chip production to the US. “The incentive is going to be they’re not going to want to pay a 25, 50 or even a 100 percent tax,” he said. Darson Chiu (邱達生), an economics professor at Taichung-based Tunghai University and director-general of
‘LEGACY CHIPS’: Chinese companies have dramatically increased mature chip production capacity, but the West’s drive for secure supply chains offers a lifeline for Taiwan When Powerchip Technology Corp (力晶科技) entered a deal with the eastern Chinese city of Hefei in 2015 to set up a new chip foundry, it hoped the move would help provide better access to the promising Chinese market. However, nine years later, that Chinese foundry, Nexchip Semiconductor Corp (合晶集成), has become one of its biggest rivals in the legacy chip space, leveraging steep discounts after Beijing’s localization call forced Powerchip to give up the once-lucrative business making integrated circuits for Chinese flat panels. Nexchip is among Chinese foundries quickly winning market share in the crucial US$56.3 billion industry of so-called legacy
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電) yesterday held its first board of directors meeting in the US, at which it did not unveil any new US investments despite mounting tariff threats from US President Donald Trump. Trump has threatened to impose 100 percent tariffs on Taiwan-made chips, prompting market speculation that TSMC might consider boosting its chip capacity in the US or ramping up production of advanced chips such as those using a 2-nanometer technology process at its Arizona fabs ahead of schedule. Speculation also swirled that the chipmaker might consider building its own advanced packaging capacity in the US as part
A move by US President Donald Trump to slap a 25 percent tariff on all steel imports is expected to place Taiwan-made steel, which already has a 25 percent tariff, on an equal footing, the Taiwan Steel & Iron Industries Association said yesterday. Speaking with CNA, association chairman Hwang Chien-chih (黃建智) said such an equal footing is expected to boost Taiwan’s competitive edge against other countries in the US market, describing the tariffs as "positive" for Taiwanese steel exporters. On Monday, Trump signed two executive orders imposing the new metal tariffs on imported steel and aluminum with no exceptions and exemptions, effective