Koichi Hamada, professor emeritus of economics
at Yale University, also told Reuters that Abe should focus on
structural reforms and slash corporate taxes deeper than
currently planned to boost the economy and attract investment.
Abe raised the sales tax in April to 8 percent from 5 percent to
curb Japan's runaway government debt. The increase hit
consumption, sending the economy into its worst fall in the
second quarter since the 2011 earthquake and tsunami.
The premier is to decide around the end of the year whether to
proceed with another planned hike, to 10 percent, in October
2015.
"As we have seen, the shock from the consumption tax hike could
be large," Hamada said in an interview. "So, ideally, we could
raise it in a staged manner, such as 1 percentage point in
October 2015 and another point after that."
Abe's government plans to cut the corporate tax rate - among the
highest in the world at more than 35 percent - to less than 30
percent over several years. Details of the exact scale and
timing of the cuts have not been decided.
"A drastic corporate tax cut would attract investment to Japan
from abroad as well as domestically," Hamada said. "This would
help to revitalize the Japanese economy, which will help expand
the tax base."
(Reporting by Kaori Kaneko, Sumito Ito and Leika Kihara; Editing
by William Mallard and Edmund Klamann)
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