Takaichi Confirms ¥3 Trillion Budget and ¥500 Billion Subsidies to Cut Energy Bills
Updated
Updated · investinglive.com · May 25
Takaichi Confirms ¥3 Trillion Budget and ¥500 Billion Subsidies to Cut Energy Bills
3 articles · Updated · investinglive.com · May 25
Japan will use ¥500 billion in reserve funds to subsidize household electricity and gas bills from July through September, Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi said.
More than ¥3 trillion in extra budget spending will be compiled to create new reserves against energy-cost shocks driven by the Middle East conflict.
New deficit-financing bonds will fund the package, a notable shift after Takaichi had earlier said stronger tax revenue and underspending would avoid additional borrowing.
Takaichi said the new debt would not disrupt the bond market because it would be offset by higher tax revenue and other factors, while pledging to prevent market turmoil.
The package offers near-term relief for households but adds to fiscal strains and could further complicate Bank of Japan policy as war-driven inflation and yen pressure persist.
With bond yields at a 30-year high, is Japan's massive new spending package a lifeline or a path to fiscal ruin?
Caught between a weak yen and an energy crisis, can Japan's new stimulus protect its economy without triggering further inflation?
As Japan pours billions into fuel subsidies, will its long-term green energy goals be sacrificed for short-term relief?