Hindustan Times (Patiala)

JAPAN PUMPS IN EXTRA FUNDING, EU UNVEILS NEW STIMULUS PLAN

- ■ letters@hindustant­imes.com

BRUSSELS/TOKYO: Japan’s Cabinet approved a proposed 32 trillionye­n ($296 billion) supplement­ary budget on Wednesday to help fund $1.1 trillion in measures to cushion the blow to the economy from the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The extra funding includes support for small businesses, funding for improved medical systems and subsidies for local government­s.

The combined stimulus enacted so far amounts to a total of more than 230 trillion yen ($2.1 trillion), or about 40% of Japan’s economy, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said, adding: “I will defend the Japanese economy at any cost against this once-in-a-century crisis.”

The same day, the European Union’s executive arm unveiled a €750 billion plan in an unpreceden­ted push to prop up economies hammered by the pandemic, hoping to end months of squabbling over how to fund a recovery that has exposed faultlines across the 27-nation bloc. Much of the money will go to Italy and Spain, among the EU’s worst-affected nations.

TOKYO/BRUSSELS: Japan’s Cabinet approved a proposed 32 trillionye­n ($296 billion) supplement­ary budget on Wednesday to help fund $1.1 trillion in measures to cushion the blow to the economy from the coronaviru­s pandemic.

At the same time, the European Union’s executive body unveiled a 750-billion-euro ($824 billion) plan on Wednesday to prop up member state economies hammered by coronaviru­s, hoping to end months of squabbling over how to fund a recovery that exposed faultlines across the 27-nation bloc.

In Japan, the extra funding under considerat­ion includes support for small businesses, funding for improved medical systems and subsidies for local government­s. The budget also will pay for measures to help prepare for possible future waves of infections.

Japan’s economy, the world’s third largest, slipped into recession in the last quarter and was already slowing before the pandemic hit thanks to weakening global demand and consumer spending.

The combined stimulus enacted so far amounts to a total of more than 230 trillion yen ($2.1 trillion), or about 40% of Japan’s economy, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said at a meeting of officials on Wednesday. “I will defend the Japanese economy at any cost against this once-in-a-century crisis,” Abe said.

In Brussel’s the EU blueprint received an initial positive reaction from Paris, Berlin, Rome and Madrid, as well as the European Parliament, and the chairman of

EU leaders said they should aim to finalise an agreement before the summer break.

Under the proposal, which could still be blocked by more frugal northern nations, the European Commission would borrow the funds from the market and then disburse two-thirds in grants and the rest in loans to cushion the unpreceden­ted slump expected this year due to lockdowns.

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