Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe yesterday announced plans for a fresh barrage of economic stimulus to help revive stalling growth.
Speaking in the southern city of Fukuoka, Abe put the scale of the extra spending at more than ¥28 trillion (US$265 billion).
That would be nearly 6 percent of Japan’s GDP, but analysts said they believed much of the money was already in the pipeline, and the money would be spread out over multiple years, diluting its impact.
The proposed package is due to be approved by the Cabinet on Tuesday next week, Kyodo news service said.
It would then be included in a supplementary budget for consideration by the parliament’s extraordinary session in September.
“The new economic package needs to be something which would bolster domestic demand and ensure a trajectory toward economic recovery,” Abe said.
Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga told reporters in a routine briefing in Tokhyo that the ruling party and its coalition partner, the Komeito, were still haggling over details of the plan.
He said raising the minimum wage by at least ¥20 an hour is another key aim.
“Raising the minimum wage and encouraging more consumer spending is extremely important and we will work hard to achieve that,” the Cabinet secretary said.
Japan’s economy, the world’s third-largest, has stagnated for years, and massive monetary and government stimulus have so far failed to jolt it into a sustained recovery.
Abe took office in late 2012 vowing to “bring Japan back,” and has made some progress toward his goal of higher inflation and faster growth, but the aging and shrinking of the Japanese population has discouraged companies from investing much in the home market, and wages have not risen significantly enough to drive a spending boom, despite a very tight labor market.
Among other measures, Abe is proposing improved wages for caretakers, introduction of needs-based scholarships for college students and reducing the number of years workers are employed that are required to earn pensions.
A large share of the spending will go to improving infrastructure, such as expanding ports to accommodate ultra-large ships and accelerating a decades-long high-speed maglev train project.
Campaigning for a parliamentary election held earlier this month, Abe promised fresh help for the economy, and ordered Japanese Economic and Fiscal Policy Minister Nobuteru Ishihara to draw up the package.
Earlier reports put the size of the package as low as ¥6 trillion.
Economists say the Bank of Japan also will likely expand monetary stimulus at a policy meeting that begins today.
“The Abe administration continues to highlight the importance of cooperation with the Bank of Japan for a fiscal stimulus package,” Alex Wijaya of CMC Markets said in a commentary.
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