Japan's plan for US$5b to boost businesses part of growth effort
JAPAN'S new government will set up schemes worth nearly US$5 billion to boost businesses, including helping them buy foreign companies, according to a draft economic stimulus package seen by Reuters yesterday that could be approved this month.
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has made reviving the economy his top priority after his Liberal Democratic Party won elections last month, combining aggressive monetary easing with fiscal spending to encourage investment and spur growth.
His spending promises have raised concerns that Japan's public debt burden, already the worst among major economies, could deteriorate further. Some economists say structural reforms might have a bigger impact after years of stop-start growth.
The Development Bank of Japan, a state-backed lender, will administer a 150 billion yen (US$1.7 billion) lending scheme to encourage companies to develop new technologies and collaborate on new business lines, according to the draft.
The stimulus package would also establish a 200 billion yen fund with the Japan Bank for International Cooperation, another state-sponsored lender, to encourage foreign mergers and takeovers.
It also includes 83 billion yen in loan guarantees and low-interest-rate loans for small firms, the draft showed.
A LDP sub-committee approved the draft yesterday, and it could be approved by the Cabinet as soon as this week.
The government will set aside 100 billion yen for the lending scheme with the DBJ in an extra budget, and the state-backed lender will use its own capital for the remaining 50 billion yen, according to the draft policy .
Government expenditure for the scheme with JBIC will total 70 billion yen. Lending from JBIC and private-sector banks will account for the remaining 130 billion yen, the draft showed.
Abe had earlier instructed the finance minister to disregard limits set by the previous government that capped new debt issuance at 44 trillion yen, which has raised concerns about fiscal discipline.
The government will sell more than 5 trillion yen in new bonds for the stimulus, which would push issuance above the 44 trillion yen cap, sources said.
The remaining funds will come from unspent money from last fiscal year's budget and money originally allocated to servicing existing debt, the sources said.
The government in coming days will compile a 12 trillion yen extra budget with up to 10 trillion yen for stimulus and public works, the sources said. The lending schemes with DBJ and JBIC would be included in the 10 trillion yen.
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has made reviving the economy his top priority after his Liberal Democratic Party won elections last month, combining aggressive monetary easing with fiscal spending to encourage investment and spur growth.
His spending promises have raised concerns that Japan's public debt burden, already the worst among major economies, could deteriorate further. Some economists say structural reforms might have a bigger impact after years of stop-start growth.
The Development Bank of Japan, a state-backed lender, will administer a 150 billion yen (US$1.7 billion) lending scheme to encourage companies to develop new technologies and collaborate on new business lines, according to the draft.
The stimulus package would also establish a 200 billion yen fund with the Japan Bank for International Cooperation, another state-sponsored lender, to encourage foreign mergers and takeovers.
It also includes 83 billion yen in loan guarantees and low-interest-rate loans for small firms, the draft showed.
A LDP sub-committee approved the draft yesterday, and it could be approved by the Cabinet as soon as this week.
The government will set aside 100 billion yen for the lending scheme with the DBJ in an extra budget, and the state-backed lender will use its own capital for the remaining 50 billion yen, according to the draft policy .
Government expenditure for the scheme with JBIC will total 70 billion yen. Lending from JBIC and private-sector banks will account for the remaining 130 billion yen, the draft showed.
Abe had earlier instructed the finance minister to disregard limits set by the previous government that capped new debt issuance at 44 trillion yen, which has raised concerns about fiscal discipline.
The government will sell more than 5 trillion yen in new bonds for the stimulus, which would push issuance above the 44 trillion yen cap, sources said.
The remaining funds will come from unspent money from last fiscal year's budget and money originally allocated to servicing existing debt, the sources said.
The government in coming days will compile a 12 trillion yen extra budget with up to 10 trillion yen for stimulus and public works, the sources said. The lending schemes with DBJ and JBIC would be included in the 10 trillion yen.
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