The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Japan’s PM: Vigilant to global economic risks clouding recovery

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TOKYO: Japan’s government will keep a close eye on looming risks to a global economic recovery as it guides policy, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said in an interview aired by public broadcaste­r NHK yesterday.

Signs of slowing global demand and recent sharp rises in the yen currency have clouded the outlook for the export-reliant economy, prompting verbal warnings from Tokyo policymake­rs over the adverse impact of volatile market moves on growth.

“While the global economy is recovering gradually, there are various risks to the outlook,” Abe said in the interview, recorded on Friday.

“Japan’s economic fundamenta­ls are sound, but we’d like to guide policy with a close eye on the various risks.”

Japan will also seek to mend Sino-US trade frictions by promoting global coordinati­on as it chairs this year’s meeting of the Group of 20 (G20) major economies, Abe said.

“As G20 chair, Japan hopes to play a leading role to foster global cooperatio­n ... to achieve stable, sustainabl­e growth,” he said, adding that both the US and China must abide by World Trade Organizati­on (WTO) rules on trade.

Any further signs of weakness in Japan’s economy could heighten market speculatio­n that Abe might again delay a scheduled sales tax hike to 10 per cent from eight per cent in October.

The increase has been postponed twice already, after a hike to eight per cent in 2014 pushed the economy into recession.

Abe said revenues from the scheduled tax hike are key to ensuring Japan’s social welfare system is sustainabl­e, and the government would take sufficient steps to mitigate the hit to growth from the higher levy.

“There’s no change to our stance of raising the sales tax as scheduled, unless Japan is hit by a shock to the scale of the (collapse of) Lehman Brothers,” Abe said. — Reuters

 ??  ?? A woman carrying her son stands in front of a food shelf as she shops at a supermarke­t in northern Tehran. A powerful Iranian council approved an anti-money laundering bill, a major step towards reforms that would bring Iran into line with global norms and could facilitate foreign trade in the face of US sanctions. — Reuters photo
A woman carrying her son stands in front of a food shelf as she shops at a supermarke­t in northern Tehran. A powerful Iranian council approved an anti-money laundering bill, a major step towards reforms that would bring Iran into line with global norms and could facilitate foreign trade in the face of US sanctions. — Reuters photo
 ??  ?? Abe looks on while holding a joint press conferce with Uruguay’s President Tabare Vazquez during an official visit, in Montevideo, Uruguay. Japan’s government will keep a close eye on looming risks to a global economic recovery as it guides policy, Abe said in an interview aired by public broadcaste­r NHK. — Reuters file photo
Abe looks on while holding a joint press conferce with Uruguay’s President Tabare Vazquez during an official visit, in Montevideo, Uruguay. Japan’s government will keep a close eye on looming risks to a global economic recovery as it guides policy, Abe said in an interview aired by public broadcaste­r NHK. — Reuters file photo

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