The Borneo Post

Japan’s Abe expected to delay sales tax rise, call snap election

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TOKYO: In late 2014, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe caught markets and voters off- guard when he postponed an unpopular sales tax hike and called a snap election.

Less than two years later, the only surprise will be if he doesn’t repeat the play.

With consumptio­n weak, wage growth limp and emerging economy slowdowns clouding Japan’s growth, economists bet Abe will again delay raising the tax to 10 per cent from 8 per cent.

Currently due in April 2017, the hike is seen by fiscal conservati­ves as vital to rein in bulging public debt and social security costs.

Breaking an end-2014 promise not to delay the tax hike again would give Abe cause to call an election for parliament’s lower house to coincide with a July poll for the upper chamber.

His ruling bloc already holds a super majority in the lower house.

Big wins in both houses for Abe’s centre-right LDP and likeminded lawmakers would boost his chances of being able to start revising Japan’s pacifist constituti­on – a move long cherished by Abe and his conservati­ve support base.

Eighteen out of 21 economists surveyed by Reuters expect Abe to delay the sales tax rise, and 15 expect a snap poll.

“It appears that he (Abe) wants to avoid any impact on the election of a tax rise, achieve a longterm administra­tion and boost the possibilit­y of revising the constituti­on,” said Harumi Taguchi, principal economist at IHS Global Insight.

The Sankei newspaper reported on Monday that Abe was likely to announce a decision to delay the tax rise around a May 26-27 Group of Seven summit that he will host.

That would be after the May 18 release of first- quarter gross domestic product data for the world’s third-biggest economy, which is expected to be weak.

It appears that he (Abe) wants to avoid any impact on the election of a tax rise, achieve a long-term administra­tion and boost the possibilit­y of revising the constituti­on.

Conservati­ves have long viewed Japan’s constituti­on – unaltered since it was drafted by US Occupation forces after Japan’s defeat in World War Two – as limiting Japan’s ability to defend itself and as a symbol of a humiliatin­g defeat. Admirers, however, say it is responsibl­e for post-war peace.

Constituti­onal revisions must be approved by a two-thirds majority in both houses of parliament and a majority of voters in a public referendum.

The only two previous cases of dual- chamber elections resulted in landslides for Abe’s Liberal Democratic Party ( LDP) in both houses.

Abe has repeatedly said the sales tax rise would go ahead unless a global economic contractio­n or a Lehman- style market shock jolted Japan’s economy. Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga repeated that stance on Monday.

Recently, however, Abe has said that whether to proceed with the rise would be a ‘political decision’, and that boosting the levy would be meaningles­s if it sliced tax revenues by growth.

Abe has also been meeting foreign economists, including advocates of fiscal stimulus such as Paul Krugman, fuelling speculatio­n that he is laying the groundwork for a delay.

The tax rise, agreed upon by Abe’s predecesso­r, has never had pride of place in his ‘Abenomics’ recipe for reviving Japan’s longsluggi­sh economy – a mix of hypereasy monetary policy, government spending and reforms.

Abe is also thought to want to call a lower house election – not formally required until 2018 – before fragmented opposition parties get their houses in order.

The main opposition Democratic Party has merged with a smaller rival, and cooperatio­n for the upper house poll with the Japanese Communist Party, the second biggest opposition group, is moving ahead. — Reuters

Harumi Taguchi, IHS Global Insight principal economist

 ??  ?? With consumptio­n weak, wage growth limp and emerging economy slowdowns clouding Japan’s growth, economists bet Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe will again delay raising the tax to 10 per cent from 8 per cent. Currently due in April 2017, the hike is...
With consumptio­n weak, wage growth limp and emerging economy slowdowns clouding Japan’s growth, economists bet Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe will again delay raising the tax to 10 per cent from 8 per cent. Currently due in April 2017, the hike is...
 ??  ?? The logo of the Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) at its headquarte­rs in Vienna, Austria. Members and key non-members led by Russia are due to discuss a proposed output freeze at a meeting in Doha on April 17. — Reuters photo
The logo of the Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) at its headquarte­rs in Vienna, Austria. Members and key non-members led by Russia are due to discuss a proposed output freeze at a meeting in Doha on April 17. — Reuters photo

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