Japan
vice econmin: More caution needed on next tax hike
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[August 27, 2014]
By Tetsushi Kajimoto
TOKYO (Reuters) - Japan's
government needs to be more cautious about a coming
decision on raising the national sales tax than it was
on the previous hike as the economy reaches a
"make-or-break point," a senior government official said
on Wednesday. |
Vice Economy Minister Yasutoshi Nishimura told Reuters he was
concerned that the drag on consumption from the April 1 tax hike is
proving prolonged, saying the government stands ready to roll out
fresh fiscal stimulus to support the economy.
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe is to decide around the end of the year
whether to proceed with a plan to raise the tax to 10 percent next
year after raising it to 8 percent from 5 percent in a bid to curb
Japan's runaway government debt.
Nishimura said he hopes that the Bank of Japan would decide on
further monetary easing as appropriate, adding that it is too early
to debate exit from its massive monetary stimulus given that
deflation has not been conquered yet.
"Our view on the economy's trend remains unchanged that it is making
steady progress toward a 2 percent inflation target, in other words
beating deflation," Nishimura told Reuters in an interview. "I'm
very concerned about private consumption's trend in July and August
... It seems that the pullback in demand after the sales tax hike is
being prolonged."
The Bank of Japan is likely to keep its bullish inflation outlook
even as it cuts its economic growth forecast for this fiscal year in
October, suggesting that the BOJ will not ease policy further at
least until the end of 2014. [ID:nL3N0QW386]
TAX HEADWINDS
The tax hike pushed the economy into its deepest slump in April-June
since the March 2011 earthquake and tsunami, as consumption unwound
from a surge earlier to avoid the higher tax rate. A recent run of
soft data - including factory output and exports - has cast some
doubt about the strength of an expected rebound in the current
quarter.
Abe is due to decide in December whether to raise the sales tax to
10 percent in October 2015, after assessing the third-quarter GDP
data and other indicators.
"Our basic stance is to raise. But I personally think more careful
judgment will be needed than the previous one, because raising 5
percentage points over a year and half would deal a considerable
blow to the economy," Nishimura said.
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"The economy is at a make-or-break point on whether it could enter a
virtuous cycle and return to sustained growth by overcoming the
pullback in demand."
Nishimura flagged risks such as falling real wages, and sluggish
exports despite a weakening of the yen.
Wages generally lag price rises by 1-2 years, and they are expected
to increase over the coming year thanks to labor shortages and
government efforts to intervene in labor negotiations between
unionists and businesses, Nishimura said.
Given sluggish exports caused in part by structural changes -
notably a shift of production overseas - Nishimura said Japan needs
to pursue domestic demand-led growth by encouraging private-sector
innovation through the "Third Arrow" of Abe's reflationary policies
dubbed Abenomics.
But that does not mean that the first two arrows - monetary and
fiscal stimulus - are no longer needed, Nishimura said, adding that
it's too early to debate exit from the BOJ's stimulus.
"As for monetary easing ... I hope the BOJ would decide as
appropriate ... we will also respond as needed with flexible fiscal
policy ... we will always respond with three arrows."
(Additional reporting by Yuko Yoshikawa and Linda Sieg; Editing by
William Mallard, Chris Gallagher & Shri Navaratnam)
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