Updated
Updated · The Guardian · May 26
Japan Floats 1% Food Tax Cut as Zero Rate Would Take Cash Registers 1 Year
Updated
Updated · The Guardian · May 26

Japan Floats 1% Food Tax Cut as Zero Rate Would Take Cash Registers 1 Year

1 articles · Updated · The Guardian · May 26

Summary

  • A 1% food sales tax is emerging as Japan’s fallback plan after officials concluded a full cut from 8% to zero cannot be rolled out quickly.
  • Big retail cash-register systems were not built to process a 0% rate across payment methods, and manufacturers say the overhaul would take up to a year; a 1% rate could be introduced in five to six months.
  • Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi had pledged a two-year zero rate by next March after February’s election, but opposition parties and commentators say the “register wall” is being used to mask delays over funding.
  • The fiscal stakes are large: suspending the food tax would cost about 5 trillion yen ($31.5 billion) a year, while the 1% compromise would trim that bill by nearly $4 billion against public debt near 230% of GDP.

Insights

Why can Japan’s registers handle a 1% tax but not zero, revealing a deeper fiscal problem?
Is Japan's tax cut delay a tech glitch or the first sign of an unavoidable national debt crisis?