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Japan to keep fiscal target deadline, reassess later this year -draft blueprint

Published 08/06/2021, 13:19
Updated 08/06/2021, 13:41
© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: A shopper wearing a protective mask pushes a shopping cart at Japan's supermarket group Aeon's shopping mall as the mall reopens amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak in Chiba, Japan May 28, 2020. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon

By Tetsushi Kajimoto and Daniel Leussink

TOKYO (Reuters) -Japan's government will stick for the moment to its goal of achieving a primary balance surplus by fiscal year 2025, but reassess the timeframe due to the economic damage caused by COVID-19, the government's draft fiscal blueprint shows.

The draft, seen by Reuters, underscores the government's commitment to fixing Japan's tattered finances. Its wording could change, however, after vetting by ruling party lawmakers, some of whom want the timeframe dropped for a second year running as the costs of combating the pandemic accumulate.

"Japan will aim to bring the primary balance into a surplus by fiscal 2025, while seeking to stably lower the country's debt-to-GDP ratio," the draft blueprint says.

"However, the government will reassess the timeframe by the end of the current fiscal year ... taking into account the still unstable economic and fiscal situation due to the pandemic's impact."

The draft will be submitted to the government's top economic council on Wednesday and formally approved by Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga's cabinet on June 18, after scrutiny by ruling coalition lawmakers.

Japan has for years set a timeframe for bringing the primary budget, excluding new bond sales and debt servicing costs, back to a surplus in its annual fiscal blueprint.

After pushing back the target several times, the most recent pledge was to achieve a primary balance surplus by fiscal 2025, a goal that analysts had said would be a tough ask even before the pandemic led to a surge in spending.

The government was forced to omit the timeframe in the blueprint last year, when it delivered huge relief packages to cushion the economic blow from the pandemic, and some ruling party lawmakers want it dropped again this year.

But wary of Japan's huge public debt and rising spending, the powerful Ministry of Finance has been lobbying lawmakers hard to defend the fiscal target and the deadline, according to government officials familiar with the deliberations.

The government's draft blueprint leaves room to phase out the timeframe through the reassessment, highlighting the tricky balance Japan faces in spurring growth while reining in public debt that has ballooned to twice the size of its economy.

© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: A shopper wearing a protective mask pushes a shopping cart at Japan's supermarket group Aeon's shopping mall as the mall reopens amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak in Chiba, Japan May 28, 2020. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon

Tokyo has deployed massive stimulus packages totalling $3 trillion over the past year to combat the pandemic, further straining public finances by adding to the debt pile that is the biggest among major industrialised nations.

The government's fiscal blueprint serves as a basis for compiling next fiscal year's budget and for laying the groundwork for long-term economic policy.

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