The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Japan outlines fresh stimulus package for virus-hit economy

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TOKYO: Japan announced fresh stimulus plans worth nearly US$300 billion yesterday to pep up the economy after the coronaviru­s pandemic tipped the country into recession.

Consumer spending has slowed to a crawl despite Japan’s relatively low infection numbers and death toll from the disease outbreak, prompting the first economic downturn since 2015.

In response Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s cabinet agreed to a second exceptiona­l budget of 31.91 trillion yen (US$296 billion), including subsidies for smaller businesses and cash handouts for medical workers.

The cash -- to be raised by issuing bonds – will also be used to help finance rescue programmes and loans for struggling businesses worth 117 trillion yen.

Combined with an initial stimulus package enacted last month, Japan’s total measures amount to 230 trillion yen when loan schemes are taken into account.

“With this world’s biggest package equivalent to 40 per cent of our GDP, we’ll protect the Japanese economy through this once-in-a-century crisis,” Abe said yesterday.

“It is of utmost importance that we deliver assistance to people in tough situations,” he said, urging MPs to pass the measures quickly through parliament.

Part of the stimulus package involves giving away 100,000 yen (US$930) to every adult and child in the country.

Other rescue measures include subsidies to help small companies pay rent, grants to medical workers and grants to help drug and vaccine developmen­t.

“We should brace ourselves for a crisis more serious than the Lehman shock,” Finance Minister Taro Aso told reporters after the Cabinet approved the budget, referring to the collapse of the US investment bank that sparked the 2008 financial crisis.

“We’ll boldly increase public spending and revitalise the economy. We’ll protect jobs and businesses,” he said.

Japan has recorded 16,651 coronaviru­s infections and 858 deaths as of Tuesday – a fraction of the toll seen in other global hotspots.

But a spike in infections prompted Abe to declare a nationwide state of emergency, handing regional governors the power to ask people stay indoors and call for businesses to close.

He lifted the emergency declaratio­n this week but said Wednesday it would take “quite a long time” for the country to fully return to normal. —

 ?? Photo — AFP ?? People wearing face masks walk in a street in Tokyo’s Ueno area two days after the Japanese government lifed a nationwide state of emergency.
Photo — AFP People wearing face masks walk in a street in Tokyo’s Ueno area two days after the Japanese government lifed a nationwide state of emergency.

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