Observing Japan: Some Good News For Takaichi In A Challenging Week
Meanwhile, Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi continues to face questions about what she discussed with US President Donald Trump, notwithstanding her government's denials of a report that suggested the US president was less than supportive of Takaichi in Japan's worsening dispute with China.
Takaichi, however, secured an important political victory when three lawmakers announced they would caucus with the Liberal Democratic Party in the lower house, giving the government a bare majority in the chamber.
Finally, both government and LDP panels have begun deliberations on foreign population policies ahead of the government's drafting of a basic policy in January.
Fiscal frictionThe Takaichi cabinet approved its FY2025 supplemental budget on Friday, November 28, clearing the way for the JPY18.3 trillion budget to be taken up for the Diet. The bulk of the extra budget will be funded by JPY11.7 trillion in government bonds, including nearly JPY8.2 trillion in deficit bonds. As the Takaichi government has repeatedly stressed, the total amount of bond issuance for FY2025 will still likely be lower than the JPY42.14 trillion issued in FY2024.
Nevertheless, Takaichi is rushing headlong into a widening debate over the government's finances. The expectation is that the new supplemental budget will mean that instead of the JPY3.6 trillion primary surplus the Cabinet Office had projected for FY2026 as recently as August, the government could run a JPY3 trillion deficit instead, with risks it could swell further.
Takaichi, who has made little secret of her determination to use fiscal policy to support her vision of a more self-reliant, resilient and strategically autonomous Japan, faces competing pressures that have already shaped perceptions of her government and will shape her government's options going forward.
On the one hand, financial markets have been sending unmistakable warning signs about her government's policies, raising long-term bond yields to their highest levels in well over a decade and triggering a sustained selloff of the yen. (The finance ministry announced that it will issue more short-term loans in January, hoping to contain long-term spikes.)
Meanwhile, she is also facing increasingly vocal opposition from the LDP's fiscal hawks, led by Taro Aso, who may be relatively sidelined (particularly on the LDP tax commission) but who are unlikely to remain silent. (Before the cabinet approved the budget, Aso met with Takaichi and reportedly suggested that the government's stimulus package is excessive in scale.)
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