Kishida is under pressure to ramp up fiscal spending ahead of an
upper house election scheduled to take place in July, putting
Japan out of sync with many Western economies that are gradually
phasing out crisis-mode stimulus measures.
The 13.2-trillion-yen ($103 billion) relief package, to be
funded mostly by reserves set aside under the current fiscal
year's budget, will consist of steps to deal with the immediate
hit from rising prices such as subsidies to gasoline wholesalers
and cash payouts to low-income households with children.
Of the total, direct government spending will amount to 6.2
trillion yen. The rest consists of non-direct spending measures
such as private-sector lending.
The government will compile an extra budget and pass it through
the current parliament session to replenish reserves and secure
funds to deal with any resurgence in COVID-19 infections or
prolonged rises in fuel costs, Kishida said.
"We must prevent rising fuel and raw material costs from
disrupting a recovery in economic and social activity from the
pandemic," Kishida told a news conference.
Aside from the relief package, the government will lay out after
the upper house election a "comprehensive" package of measures
to spear-head change in Japan's society, Kishida said.
The package will include steps to help Japan achieve a
carbon-neutral society and measures to promote the
administration's economic policy focusing on wealth
re-distribution, Kishida said, without providing details.
"We need to act pre-emptively looking at the medium- to
long-term horizon," he said.
Analysts expect the government to compile a second extra budget
later this year to fund additional spending measures, which
could well exceed the size of spending for the relief package
announced on Tuesday.
"The government will likely compile a second extra budget in
autumn or later this year," said Chotaro Morita, chief bond
strategist at SMBC Nikko Securities.
Given the ruling Liberal Democratic Party's (LDP) coalition
ally, the Komeito party, has demanded an extra budget of up to
20 trillion yen, the second round of spending could be a little
short of 20 trillion yen involving additional debt, he said.
That could further strain Japan's borrowings, the industrial
world's heaviest public debt, at more than twice the size of its
$5 trillion economy.
($1 = 127.8900 yen)
(Reporting by Leika Kihara and Tetsushi Kajimoto; Additional
reporting by Kantaro Komiya; Editing by Jacqueline Wong)
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