Japan enacts record 31.9 tril. yen extra budget to ease virus impact

Jun 12 ,2020. 20 minutes ago – 16:31 KYODO NEWS

TOKYO – Japan’s parliament enacted Friday a record 31.91 trillion yen ($298 billion) extra budget, allowing it to scale up measures aimed at mitigating the social and economic fallout from the coronavirus pandemic to twice the previous level.

As Japan faces the prospect of a new normal living with the virus, the second supplementary budget for fiscal 2020, designed to fund an additional package worth about 117 trillion yen, was approved by the House of Councillors.

With public frustration growing over what many have described as a slow response by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s administration to the spread of the virus, the additional package was enacted only six weeks after the approval of the 25.69 trillion yen first extra budget for the fiscal year from April.

The endorsement of the package, focusing on financial aid for front-line medical staff and subsidies for small businesses, followed its passage through the more powerful House of Representatives on Wednesday with the support of almost all opposition parties.

A large majority of opposition lawmakers have stressed the need to implement more measures to soften the economic pain of the pandemic. But they are not all satisfied with the way in which new cash has been allocated.

They have been intensifying pressure on the government over allegedly shady dealings involving advertising giant Dentsu Inc. in connection with a subsidy program for virus-hit firms, funded under the first extra budget.

The Abe administration has refused to extend the ongoing parliamentary session beyond next Wednesday even though opposition parties have repeatedly called for more time to question it over the latest budget and key political issues.

As part of the budget, the government will give 200,000 yen to each worker at hospitals treating COVID-19 patients and 100,000 yen to each member of staff at medical institutions that have secured beds and are prepared to accept people with the respiratory disease.

Some small firms and individual proprietors that are running low on cash will be provided with aid to an upper limit of 6 million yen to help them make rent payments.

Government debt, including 22.61 trillion yen in deficit-covering bonds, will finance the budget entirely.

The spending will push Japan’s debt dependency ratio — the amount of government bonds issued and other borrowings made annually as a percentage of total government expenditure — to above 50 percent for the first time since fiscal 2009 following the global financial crisis.

The country’s fiscal health is the worst among major economies, with public debt topping 1,100 trillion yen.

Opposition lawmakers said a 10 trillion yen reserve fund in the second extra budget was too large to be used without a breakdown of the outlay and further Diet approval.

Following the criticism, the Abe administration has decided to earmark 5 trillion yen out of the fund for the purpose of helping firms maintain employment and strengthening the medical system.

CR: KYODO NEWS