Updated
Updated · Japan Today · Jun 13
Japan Food Tax Cut Could Slash Farm Income by ¥300 Billion Across 800,000 Farms
Updated
Updated · Japan Today · Jun 13

Japan Food Tax Cut Could Slash Farm Income by ¥300 Billion Across 800,000 Farms

1 articles · Updated · Japan Today · Jun 13

Summary

  • More than ¥300 billion in annual income could be wiped out for about 800,000 small and medium-sized Japanese farms if the food and beverage consumption tax rate falls to 1% from 8%, Mitsubishi Research Institute said.
  • About 700,000 farms are fully exempt from remitting consumption tax and another 85,000 are partly exempt, so they would still pay current tax on fertilizers and machinery while collecting less tax through product prices.
  • The think tank estimated the average hit at roughly ¥400,000 per farm per year, warning the loss could speed up farmer exits in a sector dominated by smaller producers.
  • April 2027 is the target timing under government consideration for the tax cut, with subsidies and other financial support expected to cushion farms from the impact.

Insights

Is Japan's tax cut a genuine relief for consumers or a catalyst for agricultural collapse?
Why might Japan's food price cut plan actually bankrupt 800,000 of its own farmers?