City
Epaper

Japan's parliament enacts record $900bn budget for FY22

By IANS | Updated: March 22, 2022 15:25 IST

Tokyo, March 22 Japan's parliament on Tuesday enacted a record 107.60 trillion yen ($900 billion) budget for fiscal ...

Open in App

Tokyo, March 22 Japan's parliament on Tuesday enacted a record 107.60 trillion yen ($900 billion) budget for fiscal 2022 to cater to ballooning social security and defence costs as well as for provisions to counter Covid-19.

The budget for the year starting on April 1 was passed by the upper house of Japan's bicameral parliament, after it was approved in late February by the lower house and has hit a record level for the 10th successive year, reports Xinhua news agency.

The allocation for spending on social security, which comprises a third of total spending, as Japan's society continues to rapidly age and simultaneously shrink, is the largest-ever at 36.27 trillion yen and compares to 35.83 trillion yen in the previous year.

Defence-related spending, meanwhile, also marked a new record at 5.40 trillion yen, as Japan aims to ramp up spending on new technologies.

The budget also earmarks 5 trillion yen in reserve funds that can be utilized as necessary to deal with issues pertaining to the ongoing Covid-19 pandemic.

New bond issuance for the new budget will drop to 36.93 trillion yen but debt-servicing costs will stand at 24.34 trillion yen, ensuring Japan's fiscal health remains the worst among industrialised nations.

This is compounded by Japan's high dependence on borrowing to finance its ever-increasing spending, and thus will likely take beyond Prime Minister Fumio Kishida's target of 2025 to achieve a primary balance surplus.

Along with the ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) and its junior coalition partner Komeito, which control both houses of parliament, the budget was also backed by the small opposition Democratic Party for the People (DPP).

DPP leader Yuichiro Tamaki said his party supported the budget because Kishida had promised to consider activating a "trigger clause" that when oil prices rocket would temperately cut gasoline taxes.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Liberal DemocratsYuichiro tamakijapanXinhuaTokyoLiberal-democratic party
Open in App

Related Stories

HealthHow Do Japanese People Look So Young Even as They Age? Doctors Reveal the Secret

InternationalJapan Issues Tsunami Warning After Earthquake of Magnitude 6.7 Hits Aomori Prefecture

InternationalEarthquake in Japan: Magnitude 5.7 Quake Hits Off Honshu Coast

International7.2 Magnitude Earthquake Hits Japan, Tsunami Warning Issued for Northeast Coast

EntertainmentPrabhas Shares S.S.Rajamouli’s Warm Letter Celebrating Japanese Fans’ Love: “If You’ve Tasted Their Love, You Must Be in Tears”

Politics Realted Stories

MaharashtraDevendra Fadnavis on BJP-Congress Alliance in Maharashtra Civic Body Polls

MaharashtraRaj Thackeray Claims Evidence Against 65 Unopposed Mahayuti Candidates, MNS to Legal Action

MumbaiWho Is Tejasvee Ghosalkar? Shiv Sena UBT Leader and Former Corporator Joins BJP Ahead of BMC Polls

MaharashtraSanjay Raut Says Sena–MNS Already Together No Need Others Permission

MaharashtraBig Jolt to Sharad Pawar as Salil Deshmukh, Son of Anil Deshmukh, Quits NCP-SP