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But some experts believe that Ozawa may have offered the Japanese economy more of a jolt since he had proposed stimulus spending of as much as 2 trillion yen ($23.8 billion), while Kan's economic revival proposals so far have been rather timid. But others worried that Ozawa's increased spending would inflate Japan's already bulging deficit. Immediately after the vote, the dollar fell to a new 15-year low of 83.09 yen, based on market assumptions that Kan is less likely to intervene in the currency market to stem the yen's rise, which hurts Japan's exporters. Ozawa had suggested he would push for such intervention, although experts say that acting alone without coordination with other central banks would likely be ineffective. In office for just three months, Kan has not been able to achieve a great deal. His most noted policy proposal -- that Japan needed to seriously consider raising its sales tax
-- was a disaster, suggested just before July's upper house elections. He was widely blamed for the Democrats' heavy losses in that vote, and Ozawa and other party members have expressed unhappiness with his lack of decisive leadership. Kan also sought to mend any internal division created by the vote and thanked Ozawa for his advice as a senior party member over the years. A master strategist, Ozawa is widely credited with engineering the Democrats' victory over the LDP last year. "Now the election is over," Kan said. "I seek full participation and support from all lawmakers and members of the Democratic Party."
[Associated
Press;
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