Research Briefing | Jun 10, 2022

Japan’s PM Kishida shies away from fiscal consolidation in new Basic policy

Japan: Kishida shies away from fiscal consolidation in new Basic policyAfter tough negotiations within Japan’s ruling party, on June 7 the cabinet finally approved the Basic Policy on Economic and Fiscal Management and Reform for 2022 (Basic policy 2022), an annual document describing the direction and priorities for economic policy. The key takeaway is that Prime Minister Fumio Kishida is unlikely to tackle fiscal consolidation in the coming years. Instead, Kishida has shifted emphasis to increase spending on defence and various investment plans to promote growth, to be funded by debt. This will leave the BoJ with little choice but to maintain low interest rates to support fiscal funding.

What you will learn:

  • Kishida has emphasised his pro-growth stance by calling for massive investment in human capital and new technology to promote digital and green transformation. But the policy does not outline a strategy to attract private investment and the scale of public investment as a catalyst is limited.
  • After tough negotiations with powerful groups within the ruling party who want a more expansionary fiscal policy, Kishida has compromised his commitment to fiscal discipline and dropped the target year for restoring a surplus in the primary fiscal balance.
  • Rising fiscal funding through debt will leave little room to the Bank of Japan to adjust its low interest rate policy even after a leadership change in April 2023.

Back to Resource Hub

Related posts

Post

How Asia’s supply chains are changing | Techonomics Talks

Global supply chains have continued to expand, despite talk of deglobalization and nearshoring. US and Japan have started to de-couple from China, but other G7 countries grow more dependent on Chinese inputs. Several "hotspots" are emerging across Asia with multiple winning formulas.

Find Out More

Post

BoJ to raise its policy rate cautiously to 1% by 2028

We now project that the Bank of Japan will start to raise its policy rate next spring assuming another robust wage settlement at the Spring Negotiation. If inflation remains on a path towards 2%, the BoJ will likely raise rates cautiously to a terminal rate of around 1% in 2028.

Find Out More

Post

Japan inflation to rise to 1.8%, but downside risks are high

Reflecting a surprisingly strong Spring Negotiation result and weaker yen assumption, we have upgraded our baseline wage and inflation forecasts. We now project higher wage settlements will push inflation towards 1.8% by 2027. Uncertainty is high, however.

Find Out More