• Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • DMCA
Friday, January 27, 2023
MircoNews.com
  • Home
  • Stock Market News
  • Forex News
  • Economy News
  • Cryptocurrency News
  • Business News
  • Analysis
No Result
View All Result
MircoNews.com
No Result
View All Result

Japan warns of dire finances as BOJ struggles to contain yields By Reuters

by Kathy Lien
January 23, 2023
in Economy News
Reading Time: 2 mins read
A A
Dollar holds its ground as selloff drags down Aussie, Bitcoin By Reuters
ShareShareShareShareShare

Related posts

Yen surges after Japan intervenes with first support since 1998 By Reuters

Colombia’s economy has high growth potential but cannot ditch oil, mining -IDB By Reuters

January 26, 2023
Taiwan central bank again raises benchmark rate, cuts growth outlook By Reuters

Bank of Canada’s Q3 loss spurs government to fix central bank equity problem By Reuters

January 26, 2023

© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: Japan’s Finance Minister Shunichi Suzuki speaks at a news conference after Japan intervened in the currency market for the first time since 1998 to shore up the battered yen in Tokyo, Japan September 22, 2022. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon

By Tetsushi Kajimoto

TOKYO (Reuters) – Japan’s finances are becoming increasingly precarious, Finance Minister Shunichi Suzuki warned on Monday, just as markets test whether the central bank can keep interest rates ultra-low, allowing the government to service its debt.

The government has been helped by near-zero bond yields, but bond investors have recently sought to break the Bank of Japan’s (BOJ) 0.5% cap on the 10-year bond yield, as inflation runs at 41-year highs, double the central bank’s 2% target.

“Japan’s public finances have increased in severity to an unprecedented degree as we have compiled supplementary budgets to respond to the coronavirus and similar issues,” Suzuki said in a policy speech starting a session of parliament.

It is not unusual for the finance minister to refer to Japan’s strained finances. Despite the country’s growing debt pile, the government remains under pressure to keep the fiscal spigot wide open. Japan must balance regional security concerns over China, Russia and North Korea, and manage a debt burden more than twice the size of its $5 trillion economy – by far the heaviest burden in the industrialised world.

Market showed little reaction to Suzuki’s speech, in which he explained the details of the coming fiscal year’s state budget worth a record 114.4 trillion yen ($878.9 billion).

Suzuki reiterated the government’s aim to achieve an annual budget surplus – excluding new bond sales and debt-servicing costs – in the fiscal year to March 2026. The government, however, has missed budget-balancing targets for a decade.

The Ministry of Finance estimates that every 1-percentage-point rise in interest rates would boost debt service by 3.7 trillion yen to 32.5 trillion yen for the 2025/2026 fiscal year.

“The government will strive to stably manage Japanese government bond (JGBs) issuance through close communication with the market,” he said.

“Overall JGB issuance, including rolling over bonds, remain at an extremely high level worth about 206 trillion yen. “We will step up efforts to keep JGB issuance stable.”

“Public finance is the cornerstone of a country’s trust. We must secure fiscal space under normal circumstances to safeguard trust in Japan and people’s livelihood at a time of emergency.”

LABOUR REFORM

Prime Minister Fumio Kishida echoed Suzuki’s resolve to revive the economy and tackle fiscal reform. He stressed the need for a positive cycle of growth led by corporate profits and private consumption, which accounts for more than half of the economy.

“Wage hikes hold the key to this virtuous cycle,” Kishida said in his policy speech. He vowed to push labour reform to create a structure that allows sustainable wage growth and overcome the pain of rising living costs.

“First of all, we need to realise wage growth that exceeds price increases,” Kishida added, pledging to also boost childcare support, and push investment and reform in areas such as green and digital transformation.

($1 = 129.5700 yen)

Credit: Source link

ShareTweetSendPinShare
Previous Post

Dollar lower as market eyes slower Fed rate hikes By Investing.com

Next Post

Spotify to trim 6% of workforce, content head to depart By Reuters

Next Post
Spotify to trim 6% of workforce, content head to depart By Reuters

Spotify to trim 6% of workforce, content head to depart By Reuters

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

RECOMMENDED NEWS

Robinhood Adds USDC As First Stablecoin To Its Crypto Listings By DailyCoin

GameFi needs a wider choice of products to take off, Animoca Brands CEO says By Cointelegraph

6 days ago
Dollar Weakens, Euro Shines After ECB Meeting By Investing.com

Dollar flat as market waits for U.S. GDP figures By Investing.com

18 hours ago
Bank of Japan to flag rising price pressure, maintain ultra-easy policy By Reuters

Peru’s economy growing at healthy clip despite social unrest, minister says By Reuters

2 days ago
Dollar holds its ground as selloff drags down Aussie, Bitcoin By Reuters

Pound faces mid-Atlantic as markets eye BOE blink :Mike Dolan By Reuters

2 days ago
China Evergrande gets $260 million demand, warns of non-payment By Reuters

Bayer investor criticizes Bayer chair for lack of initiative

5 days ago
Wall Street ends higher, gains driven by banks, healthcare By Reuters

Wall St reverses gains as energy, growth shares drag By Reuters

December 28, 2022
Tesla reports record quarterly deliveries but misses estimates By Reuters

Tesla reports record quarterly deliveries but misses estimates By Reuters

January 2, 2023
London Stock Exchange acquires Quantile By Reuters

Bahamas regulator sticks to estimate of FTX assets By Reuters

January 3, 2023
Elliott builds stake in Japanese EV battery parts supplier

Elliott builds stake in Japanese EV battery parts supplier

January 24, 2023
Dogecoin Jesus? Roger Ver resurfaces on Twitter, backs DOGE over BTC By Cointelegraph

BTC price lurches toward $16K as stocks, dollar wobble in final session By Cointelegraph

January 1, 2023
Dollar Up, Boosted Back Above Support Levels as U.S. Yields Climb By Investing.com

Dollar largely flat; U.S. CPI in focus after Powell fails to provide lead By Investing.com

January 11, 2023

About Us

mirconews.com is an online news portal that aims to provide the Stock Market News, Forex News, Economy News, Cryptocurrency News, Business News, Analysis and much more stuff like that around the world.

What’s New Here!

  • Wells Fargo CEO Scharf’s 2022 pay unchanged at $24.5 million By Reuters
  • China’s singles fight family pressure to get married as population declines
  • Colombia’s economy has high growth potential but cannot ditch oil, mining -IDB By Reuters

Topics to Cover!

  • Analysis (892)
  • Business News (1,680)
  • Cryptocurrency News (1,431)
  • Economy News (1,428)
  • Forex News (1,129)
  • Stock Market News (1,424)

Subscribe Now

Loading
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • DMCA

© 2021 - mirconews.com - All rights reserved!

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Stock Market News
  • Forex News
  • Economy News
  • Cryptocurrency News
  • Business News
  • Analysis

© 2021 - mirconews.com - All rights reserved!