The Sun (Malaysia)

Japan govt mulls stimulus worth 10% of country’s GDP: Report

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TOKYO: Japan's government is considerin­g a fiscal stimulus package worth roughly 10% of annual economic output to combat the impact of the coronaviru­s outbreak, the Nikkei newspaper said yesterday.

The package, worth more than ¥56 trillion (RM2.2 trillion), will include cash payouts to households who have seen their income fall due to the epidemic, the paper said without citing sources.

That size of stimulus would put Japan in line with interventi­ons from other major developed countries to fend off the shock from the health crisis that has closed shops and offices, locked down national population­s and stretched supply chains close to breaking point.

Cash payouts may start as early as in May, with the government considerin­g offering each eligible household up to ¥300,000, the Nikkei said.

The government compiled a ¥26 trillion stimulus package last December to deal with the hit to the export-reliant economy from the US-China trade war.

Since much of that has yet to be spent, the government will divert some to anticorona­virus measures and provide additional funds up to a total of above ¥56 trillion, the newspaper said.

A supplement­ary budget to fund the new package will be approved by the cabinet in early April and sent to parliament, aiming for passage later that month, the Nikkei said.

Sources have told Reuters the government is working on a stimulus package worth ¥30 trillion in response to the epidemic, including direct fiscal spending exceeding ¥15 trillion.

Worldwide travel bans and event cancellati­ons including the Tokyo Olympics have placed additional strains on Japan's economy.

The Bank of Japan also stands ready to expand stimulus for a second straight month in April if the pandemic leads to cuts in jobs and capital expenditur­e big enough to derail prospects of an economic recovery, sources say. – Reuters

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