Japan warns of dire finances as BOJ struggles to contain yields
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[January 23, 2023] By
Tetsushi Kajimoto
TOKYO (Reuters) - Japan's finances are becoming increasingly precarious,
Finance Minister Shunichi Suzuki warned on Monday, just as markets test
whether the central bank can keep interest rates ultra-low, allowing the
government to service its debt.
The government has been helped by near-zero bond yields, but bond
investors have recently sought to break the Bank of Japan's (BOJ) 0.5%
cap on the 10-year bond yield, as inflation runs at 41-year highs,
double the central bank's 2% target.
"Japan's public finances have increased in severity to an unprecedented
degree as we have compiled supplementary budgets to respond to the
coronavirus and similar issues," Suzuki said in a policy speech starting
a session of parliament.
It is not unusual for the finance minister to refer to Japan's strained
finances. Despite the country's growing debt pile, the government
remains under pressure to keep the fiscal spigot wide open. Japan must
balance regional security concerns over China, Russia and North Korea,
and manage a debt burden more than twice the size of its $5 trillion
economy - by far the heaviest burden in the industrialised world.
Market showed little reaction to Suzuki's speech, in which he explained
the details of the coming fiscal year's state budget worth a record
114.4 trillion yen ($878.9 billion).
Suzuki reiterated the government's aim to achieve an annual budget
surplus - excluding new bond sales and debt-servicing costs - in the
fiscal year to March 2026. The government, however, has missed
budget-balancing targets for a decade.
The Ministry of Finance estimates that every 1-percentage-point rise in
interest rates would boost debt service by 3.7 trillion yen to 32.5
trillion yen for the 2025/2026 fiscal year.
"The government will strive to stably manage Japanese government bond (JGBs)
issuance through close communication with the market," he said.
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Japan's Finance Minister Shunichi Suzuki
speaks at a news conference after Japan intervened in the currency
market for the first time since 1998 to shore up the battered yen in
Tokyo, Japan September 22, 2022. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon
"Overall JGB issuance, including rolling over bonds, remain at an
extremely high level worth about 206 trillion yen. "We will step up
efforts to keep JGB issuance stable."
"Public finance is the cornerstone of a country's trust. We must
secure fiscal space under normal circumstances to safeguard trust in
Japan and people's livelihood at a time of emergency."
LABOUR REFORM
Prime Minister Fumio Kishida echoed Suzuki's resolve to revive the
economy and tackle fiscal reform. He stressed the need for a
positive cycle of growth led by corporate profits and private
consumption, which accounts for more than half of the economy.
"Wage hikes hold the key to this virtuous cycle," Kishida said in
his policy speech. He vowed to push labour reform to create a
structure that allows sustainable wage growth and overcome the pain
of rising living costs.
"First of all, we need to realise wage growth that exceeds price
increases," Kishida added, pledging to also boost childcare support,
and push investment and reform in areas such as green and digital
transformation.
($1 = 129.5700 yen)
(Reporting by Tetsushi Kajimoto; Editing by William Mallard and
Jacqueline Wong)
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