Japan's finance minister says addressing rising cost of living, as extra
budget debated
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[May 25, 2022] By
Tetsushi Kajimoto
TOKYO (Reuters) -Urgent steps will be taken
to ease pain caused by the surging cost of living in Japan, and to help
the economy recover from the ill-effects of COVID, Finance Minister
Shunichi Suzuki said as he presented a supplementary budget to
parliament.
Lawmakers began debating on Wednesday the proposed extra budget - worth
2.7 trillion yen ($21 billion) - to help households and small firms cope
with high energy and food prices.
The government plans to spend 1.17 trillion yen of it on mitigating the
effect of rising global oil prices. This will include subsidising
gasoline wholesalers.
"Uncertainty about the outlook is rising, mainly because Russia's
invasion of Ukraine has destabilised crude oil and commodity prices,"
Suzuki told the lower house of parliament.
"That could hamper the pace of economic recovery from the coronavirus."
The supplementary budget also includes 1.52 trillion yen for budget
reserves that the government will be able to spend later as necessary.
Suzuki said he would encourage firms to smoothly pass on rising costs
and raise wages to generate a virtuous cycle of growth that will help to
ensure Japan's economy recovers from the impact of the pandemic.
The extra budget will be funded by bond sales, which could further
strain a public debt that is already more than twice as large as annual
economic output.
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Japan's Finance Minister Shunichi Suzuki prepares to ring a bell
during the New Year ceremony marking the open of trading in 2022 at
the Tokyo Stock Exchange (TSE), amid the coronavirus disease
(COVID-19) pandemic, in Tokyo, Japan, January 4, 2022. REUTERS/Issei
Kato/File Photo
To prevent the huge debt from becoming unmanageable, Suzuki's fiscal advisory
panel urged the government to stick to its aim of achieving a primary budget
surplus, which excludes new bond sales and debt servicing, by the end of fiscal
year in March 2026.
"As a trade deficit may take hold from now on, market confidence in the yen and
the fiscal situation will be called into question more than ever," the panel
said in its fiscal reform recommendations.
"If the primary balance target takes a step backward, the risk is large for
Japan to lose market trust."
The finance ministry wants the government to include the balanced budget target
in its mid-year policy roadmap, but there are divisions over the plan within the
ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP).
($1 = 127.0200 yen)
(Reporting by Tetsushi Kajimoto; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore)
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