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Japan's cabinet OKs record 96.34 trillion yen budget for FY2015

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TOKYO (Kyodo) -- Japan's cabinet on Wednesday approved a record-high 96.34 trillion yen ($810.97 billion) general-account budget for fiscal 2015, with Prime Minister Shinzo Abe seeking to balance fiscal rehabilitation and economic growth.

Despite a delay in a consumption tax hike to 10 percent by 18 months to April 2017, the government is likely to attain its key goal of halving the ratio of the primary balance deficit to gross domestic product by fiscal 2015 from the fiscal 2010 level.

The country's policy spending, however, will reach a record-high 72.89 trillion yen, up 2.79 trillion yen from the fiscal 2014 original budget, suggesting Abe's administration has failed to streamline expenditures, mainly those for social security programs.

The central government's tax revenue is estimated to reach 54.53 trillion yen, the highest in 24 years, as corporate tax payments are expected to grow with the yen's depreciation bolstering the profitability of export-oriented manufacturers.
New bond issuance will be curbed to 36.86 trillion yen, down 4.39 trillion yen from the amount set under the initial state budget for fiscal 2014.

The deficit in the primary balance is forecast to shrink by more than 4 trillion yen from the previous fiscal year to 13.4 trillion yen in the next fiscal year starting April 2015.

A deficit in the balance means the nation cannot finance government spending other than debt-servicing costs without issuing new bonds. Improvement of the balance is viewed as a critical first step toward fiscal consolidation.

"I'm confident that we mapped out a budget that will help simultaneously achieve economic revitalization and fiscal soundness," Abe told reporters later Wednesday.

But 38.3 percent of the budget will be financed by new bond issuance in fiscal 2015, putting pressure on Abe to make further efforts to rein in government spending while preventing the economy from languishing.

Many experts say it will be difficult to restore Japan's public finances by only boosting tax revenue, though Abe has put priority on economic expansion.

In the worst-case scenario, tax revenue will not grow as the government estimates, if the pace of economic growth is slower than it forecasts during the year through March 2016.

Abe's cabinet said Monday that Japan's economy is expected to grow 2.7 percent in nominal terms in fiscal 2015, with some analysts saying that projection is too optimistic.

Japan's economy has been lethargic in the wake of the 3-percentage-point consumption tax hike to 8 percent on April 1.

The government, which compiled a 95.88 trillion yen original budget for fiscal 2014, plans to submit the draft budget for fiscal 2015 to the Diet session to be convened later this month.

Of the 96.34 trillion yen in expenditures, 23.45 trillion yen will be allocated for national debt service costs.

Social security costs, including swelling spending on pensions and medical costs, will rise 3.3 percent from the fiscal 2014 initial budget to a record 31.53 trillion yen in fiscal 2015.

The expenses, accounting for around 40 percent of policy spending, will exceed 30 trillion yen for the second straight year amid the country's rapidly graying population.

Defense expenditures will also climb 2.0 percent to a record 4.98 trillion yen, up for the third consecutive year, as Abe aims to strengthen surveillance and defense capabilities to counter China's growing assertiveness in nearby waters.

Spending on public works projects, which the government views as having an immediate impact on the corporate sector, will increase slightly to 5.971 trillion yen from 5.969 trillion yen.

The premier's "Abenomics" policy mix is comprised of drastic monetary policy by the Bank of Japan, flexible fiscal spending and a growth strategy designed to energize private-sector investment.

Along with a 3.12 trillion yen supplementary budget for fiscal 2014 crafted earlier this month, the government will continue to implement measures necessary to prop up the flagging economy under a total budget of around 100 trillion yen.

On the fiscal reform front, Tokyo has pledged internationally to turn the balance into a surplus by fiscal 2020, after achieving the fiscal 2015 goal.

Economists are watching for whether Abe can hammer out a concrete plan to attain the fiscal 2020 goal, as he has promised to release it by the summer.

"It is a very tough job" to pave the way for the accomplishment of the goal, Finance Minister Taro Aso said at a press conference Wednesday, adding, "We have to work harder to cut expenditures in an aggressive manner."

Japan's fiscal health is the worst among major industrialized economies, with public debt at more than 200 percent of GDP. Central government debt has topped 1,000 trillion yen.

The fiscal 2015 annual budget is unlikely to be enacted by the end of the current fiscal year as the budget compilation process was deferred due to the Dec. 14 general election.

If Diet schedules do not allow the budget to pass by March 31, a stopgap budget will be formulated.


Japan's cabinet OKs record 96.34 trillion yen budget for FY2015- Nikkei Asian Review
 
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TOKYO (Kyodo) -- Japan's cabinet on Wednesday approved a record-high 96.34 trillion yen ($810.97 billion) general-account budget for fiscal 2015, with Prime Minister Shinzo Abe seeking to balance fiscal rehabilitation and economic growth.

Despite a delay in a consumption tax hike to 10 percent by 18 months to April 2017, the government is likely to attain its key goal of halving the ratio of the primary balance deficit to gross domestic product by fiscal 2015 from the fiscal 2010 level.

The country's policy spending, however, will reach a record-high 72.89 trillion yen, up 2.79 trillion yen from the fiscal 2014 original budget, suggesting Abe's administration has failed to streamline expenditures, mainly those for social security programs.

The central government's tax revenue is estimated to reach 54.53 trillion yen, the highest in 24 years, as corporate tax payments are expected to grow with the yen's depreciation bolstering the profitability of export-oriented manufacturers.
New bond issuance will be curbed to 36.86 trillion yen, down 4.39 trillion yen from the amount set under the initial state budget for fiscal 2014.

The deficit in the primary balance is forecast to shrink by more than 4 trillion yen from the previous fiscal year to 13.4 trillion yen in the next fiscal year starting April 2015.

A deficit in the balance means the nation cannot finance government spending other than debt-servicing costs without issuing new bonds. Improvement of the balance is viewed as a critical first step toward fiscal consolidation.

"I'm confident that we mapped out a budget that will help simultaneously achieve economic revitalization and fiscal soundness," Abe told reporters later Wednesday.

But 38.3 percent of the budget will be financed by new bond issuance in fiscal 2015, putting pressure on Abe to make further efforts to rein in government spending while preventing the economy from languishing.

Many experts say it will be difficult to restore Japan's public finances by only boosting tax revenue, though Abe has put priority on economic expansion.

In the worst-case scenario, tax revenue will not grow as the government estimates, if the pace of economic growth is slower than it forecasts during the year through March 2016.

Abe's cabinet said Monday that Japan's economy is expected to grow 2.7 percent in nominal terms in fiscal 2015, with some analysts saying that projection is too optimistic.

Japan's economy has been lethargic in the wake of the 3-percentage-point consumption tax hike to 8 percent on April 1.

The government, which compiled a 95.88 trillion yen original budget for fiscal 2014, plans to submit the draft budget for fiscal 2015 to the Diet session to be convened later this month.

Of the 96.34 trillion yen in expenditures, 23.45 trillion yen will be allocated for national debt service costs.

Social security costs, including swelling spending on pensions and medical costs, will rise 3.3 percent from the fiscal 2014 initial budget to a record 31.53 trillion yen in fiscal 2015.

The expenses, accounting for around 40 percent of policy spending, will exceed 30 trillion yen for the second straight year amid the country's rapidly graying population.

Defense expenditures will also climb 2.0 percent to a record 4.98 trillion yen, up for the third consecutive year, as Abe aims to strengthen surveillance and defense capabilities to counter China's growing assertiveness in nearby waters.

Spending on public works projects, which the government views as having an immediate impact on the corporate sector, will increase slightly to 5.971 trillion yen from 5.969 trillion yen.

The premier's "Abenomics" policy mix is comprised of drastic monetary policy by the Bank of Japan, flexible fiscal spending and a growth strategy designed to energize private-sector investment.

Along with a 3.12 trillion yen supplementary budget for fiscal 2014 crafted earlier this month, the government will continue to implement measures necessary to prop up the flagging economy under a total budget of around 100 trillion yen.

On the fiscal reform front, Tokyo has pledged internationally to turn the balance into a surplus by fiscal 2020, after achieving the fiscal 2015 goal.

Economists are watching for whether Abe can hammer out a concrete plan to attain the fiscal 2020 goal, as he has promised to release it by the summer.

"It is a very tough job" to pave the way for the accomplishment of the goal, Finance Minister Taro Aso said at a press conference Wednesday, adding, "We have to work harder to cut expenditures in an aggressive manner."

Japan's fiscal health is the worst among major industrialized economies, with public debt at more than 200 percent of GDP. Central government debt has topped 1,000 trillion yen.

The fiscal 2015 annual budget is unlikely to be enacted by the end of the current fiscal year as the budget compilation process was deferred due to the Dec. 14 general election.

If Diet schedules do not allow the budget to pass by March 31, a stopgap budget will be formulated.


Japan's cabinet OKs record 96.34 trillion yen budget for FY2015- Nikkei Asian Review

What's the Budget for your military in 2015 going to be???
 
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Where does the budget come from??
Japanese government should have very high rate of debt...
 
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Wow... that's nice.. only 0.9%... i hope with Chinese are getting more aggressive everyday Cina would raise it around 1.5%..

can you provide me your defence budget in dollars

its about $42bn
also, you mean you hope japan would raise ito 1.5%?

and yes japan has one of the lowest defence budgets in the worlds, china in fact also has below average defence budget as a percentage of GDP. however the problem isn't percentage per-say, japan also has large amount of debt, yes its mostly to its own people but even so they need to make payments which comes out of government coffers, in fact even if china and japan had the exactly same GDP china could afford to spend more simply because it has less debt and thus less debt payments. this is not to mention other differences like elderly care, differences in health care, wage costs etc.
 
. . .
Where does the budget come from??
Japanese government should have very high rate of debt...
$810.97 billion:wacko::what:

Most of it will go for government , civil development, infrastructure , citizen development projects. Out of that $810 billion, only a measly $42 billion goes to defense spending. :)

its about $42bn
also, you mean you hope japan would raise ito 1.5%?

and yes japan has one of the lowest defence budgets in the worlds, china in fact also has below average defence budget as a percentage of GDP. however the problem isn't percentage per-say, japan also has large amount of debt, yes its mostly to its own people but even so they need to make payments which comes out of government coffers, in fact even if china and japan had the exactly same GDP china could afford to spend more simply because it has less debt and thus less debt payments. this is not to mention other differences like elderly care, differences in health care, wage costs etc.

Japan has a more mature and advanced societal development than many of our peers, the nation is --- ultra developed. I don't think we should be comparing HDI or quality of life between Japanese vs Chinese Et al. We shouldnt make this into a dickmeasuring contest.
 
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Most of it will go for government , civil development, infrastructure , citizen development projects. Out of that $810 billion, only a measly $42 billion goes to defense spending. :)



Japan has a more mature and advanced societal development than many of our peers, the nation is --- ultra developed. I don't think we should be comparing HDI or quality of life between Japanese vs Chinese Et al. We shouldnt make this into a dickmeasuring contest.

What's the amt you are spending on Infrastructure & which type
 
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Where does the budget come from??
Japanese government should have very high rate of debt...

So is the national saving rate and huge pension fund, the balance is always stable,not an issue until you believe in those nonsense of western rating agencies, who are more troubles than credible sources.
 
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