27-08-2013, 07:48 PM
more on Abenomics...
Japan’s debt-funding costs to hit S$330b next year
TOKYO - Japan expects to spend a record 25.3 trillion yen (S$330 billion) to service its debt during the next fiscal year, a document obtained by Reuters showed, underscoring the huge burden created by the government’s borrowings.
The amount to be allocated for debt servicing for the year that will begin on April 1 is nearly as large as the gross domestic product of Singapore, which the World Bank put at US$275 billion (S$330 billion) at the end of 2012.
Japan’s Ministry of Finance (MOF), charged with drafting the state budget and issuing government bonds, will request the amount in debt-servicing costs under the budget, the document showed on Tuesday. That will be up 13.7 per cent from the amount set aside for the current fiscal year, reflecting the ministry’s plan to guard against any future rise in long-term interest rates.
The increased debt-servicing cost may heighten pressure on Prime Minister Shinzo Abe to proceed with a scheduled two-stage sales tax hike from next year, which is seen as a necessary first step in fixing Japan’s tattered finances.
But with Mr Abe having made ending 15 years of deflation and revitalisation of Japan’s economy among his top policy priorities, some of his advisers and members of his ruling Liberal Democratic Party want to delay or water down the tax hikes, worried they could hurt a budding economic recovery.
Years of fiscal stimulus to revive a stagnant economy and surging social welfare costs for a rapidly ageing population have led to Japan running a record 1,000 trillion yen in public debt, double the size of its economy and the biggest among major industrialised nations.
The MOF will compile spending requests for next fiscal year’s budget, including its own to fund debt-servicing costs and other expenses, and draft the state budget, which needs government and parliament approval to take effect.
http://www.todayonline.com/business/japa...-next-year
Japan’s debt-funding costs to hit S$330b next year
TOKYO - Japan expects to spend a record 25.3 trillion yen (S$330 billion) to service its debt during the next fiscal year, a document obtained by Reuters showed, underscoring the huge burden created by the government’s borrowings.
The amount to be allocated for debt servicing for the year that will begin on April 1 is nearly as large as the gross domestic product of Singapore, which the World Bank put at US$275 billion (S$330 billion) at the end of 2012.
Japan’s Ministry of Finance (MOF), charged with drafting the state budget and issuing government bonds, will request the amount in debt-servicing costs under the budget, the document showed on Tuesday. That will be up 13.7 per cent from the amount set aside for the current fiscal year, reflecting the ministry’s plan to guard against any future rise in long-term interest rates.
The increased debt-servicing cost may heighten pressure on Prime Minister Shinzo Abe to proceed with a scheduled two-stage sales tax hike from next year, which is seen as a necessary first step in fixing Japan’s tattered finances.
But with Mr Abe having made ending 15 years of deflation and revitalisation of Japan’s economy among his top policy priorities, some of his advisers and members of his ruling Liberal Democratic Party want to delay or water down the tax hikes, worried they could hurt a budding economic recovery.
Years of fiscal stimulus to revive a stagnant economy and surging social welfare costs for a rapidly ageing population have led to Japan running a record 1,000 trillion yen in public debt, double the size of its economy and the biggest among major industrialised nations.
The MOF will compile spending requests for next fiscal year’s budget, including its own to fund debt-servicing costs and other expenses, and draft the state budget, which needs government and parliament approval to take effect.
http://www.todayonline.com/business/japa...-next-year
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