In
its twice-yearly fiscal and economic projections, the government
forecast that the primary budget, excluding new bond sales and
debt servicing, would achieve a surplus of 300 billion yen ($2.9
billion) in the fiscal year starting April 2029.
That was unchanged from its previous forecast released last
July, when it pushed back the projection for achieving the
surplus by two years.
The uncertainty hanging over the economic outlook due to
COVID-19 is particularly painful for Japan, which is saddled
with a public debt burden more than twice the size of its $5
trillion economy, the biggest among industrialised nations.
"The decline in tax revenue for fiscal 2021 was factored in last
summer, in the estimate from July," Economy Minister Yasutoshi
Nishimura told a news conference after the government presented
the figures at its top economic and fiscal policy panel.
That meant the forecasts nearly matched what the government had
previously expected, Nishimura said, adding that the forecasts
did not factor in any fiscal reform measures.
"If fiscal reform goes ahead as it has previously... it's
possible to move (the target) forward by about three years,"
Nishimura added.
(Reporting by Daniel Leussink; Editing by Edwina Gibbs and
Gareth Jones)
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