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Home International Customs Japan

Japan delays sales tax rise to 2019

byCT Report
02/06/2016
in Japan, Latest News
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TOKYO: Japan has delayed plans to raise the country’s sales tax to 10% from the current 8%. The tax increase was supposed to take place next year, but now Prime Minister Shinzo Abe wants to delay it to late 2019.

Mr Abe says he wants to speed up his “Abenomics” policy, which aims to reverse more than a decade of deflation and stimulate economic growth. The sales tax was first introduced in 1989 at a rate of 3%.

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“I want to fulfil my responsibility by accelerating Abenomics more and more,” Mr Abe told MPs in his ruling Liberal Democratic Party on Wednesday.

The rise in the sales tax from 8% to 10% was initially meant to take place in October 2015, but it was then moved to April 2017 and has now been pushed back even further.

Japan relies heavily on domestic consumption, but its population is ageing and shrinking so fewer people are contributing to the economy. The Bank of Japan (BOJ) introduced a negative interest rate policy of -0.1% in January, a move which surprised many economists.

The introduction of negative rates – a first for Japan – aimed to increase spending and investment, which should in turn boost economic growth. Analysis: Karishma Vaswani, Asia business correspondent

Putting off the consumption tax is unlikely to win Mr Abe any friends amongst Japan’s economic conservatives. But it’s hard to see what else he could have done.

The economic recovery in Japan is still weak, and allowing the consumption tax to go ahead as planned – even if a year away – was likely to have scared consumers in Japan to start saving even more, which is the last thing Japan needs. What Mr Abe wants to avoid most of all is the pronouncement that his precious Abenomics policy has pretty much failed.

He’s bet his credibility on turning Japan’s economy around. However, despite using billions of dollars worth of fiscal stimulus and unconventional monetary policy to do this, nothing seems to be working.

Perhaps it may be time to start pressing the pedal on structural reforms – but given the reluctance amongst Japanese corporations to change, that will be much harder to do.

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