Japan
government approves record $812 billion budget;
deficit-halving goal in sight
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[January 14, 2015]
By Tetsushi Kajimoto
TOKYO (Reuters) - Japanese Prime Minister
Shinzo Abe's cabinet approved on Wednesday a record $812 billion budget
for the fiscal year starting on April 1, while cutting new borrowing for
a third straight year in a bid to balance growth and fiscal reform.
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The 96.34 trillion yen ($812.45 billion) general-account budget
draft, the third since Abe swept to power in late 2012, marks a rise
from this fiscal year's initial 95.88 trillion yen, reflecting
higher welfare spending and military outlays.
A projected rise in tax revenue to a 24-year high of 54.53 trillion
yen on an expected economic recovery allows Tokyo to cut new bond
issuance to a six-year low of 36.86 trillion yen. That accounts for
38.3 percent of the budget, a six-year low.
With Japan's public debt above twice its gross domestic product
(GDP), the industrial world's heaviest burden, Abe sought to restore
fiscal health while lifting growth in the world's third largest
economy.
"I believe the budget will contribute to achieving economic revival
and fiscal consolidation at the same time," Abe told reporters.
Abe said Japan is on course to meet his promise of halving the
primary budget deficit - excluding new bond sales and debt servicing
- in the next fiscal year from levels seen in 2010/11. But the
improvement is largely a result of the tax revenue windfall from
rising corporate profits under the easy-money policies of "Abenomics."
Fitch Ratings last month threatened to cut its A plus rating on
Japan's government debt if the budget did not offset revenue from
Abe's delay of a planned sales-tax hike.
"This budget underlines slowness in fiscal consolidation and it
highlights the risk of relying too much on growth to cover rising
spending," said Yasuhide Yajima, chief economist at NLI Research
Institute. "It's impossible to achieve a primary budget balance
without credible measures for spending restraint."
Masaki Kuwahara, senior economist at Nomura Securities, said the
budget is neutral for his 2.2 percent GDP growth forecast for next
fiscal year.
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The budget projects the primary budget deficit will narrow by 4.6
trillion yen to 13.4 trillion yen. But Finance Ministry projections
show that without further efforts, the government can't keep its
promise of balancing the budget by 2020/21.
The largest budget item, social welfare spending, will rise 1
trillion yen to a record 31.53 trillion yen.
Defence spending also hit a record 4.98 trillion yen, up about 100
billion yen from this fiscal year and rising for a third straight
year, reflecting Abe's ambition to counter China's rising military
might.
Despite the narrower budget deficit, the growing stock of
outstanding debt will push interest payments and redemptions up 200
billion yen to a record 23.45 trillion yen.
($1 = 118.5800 yen)
(Editing by William Mallard and Richard Borsuk)
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