Japan
economy 'faces same risks as Europe'
Japan
faces the same risks that plague financially-embattled European
states, Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda warned Saturday, days after he
pushed through a divisive tax bill to chip away at the country’s
mountainous debt.
1
July, 2012
Noda’s
statement comes a day after leaders from the 17 countries sharing the
euro struck a deal to direct emergency measures at Italy and Spain
and boost the ailing economy.
“Countries
like Italy and Spain have made desperate efforts” towards financial
recovery, Noda said.
“But
once markets start looking into a country’s fiscal condition and
considers its government has no ability to enforce disciplined
management, what would happen? We need to think about it very hard.”
he told a forum in Tokyo.
The
European accord paves the way for the eurozone’s 500-billion-euro
($630 billion) bailout fund to recapitalise ailing banks directly,
without passing through national budgets and adding to struggling
countries’ debt mountains.
The
eurozone bailout funds would be used to stabilise markets by buying
countries’ bonds to drive down high borrowing costs that in recent
weeks have crippled Spain and Italy.
Japan
also has accumulated a huge public debt, which at more than double
the GDP, is proportionately the world’s largest, and Noda has
warned that the future of the world’s third-largest economy rests
on tackling it.
Noda,
who has staked his premiership on a tax rise widely believed to be a
sensible way for Japan to begin plugging its fiscal hole, on Tuesday
passed legislation to double consumption tax in the powerful lower
chamber.
“Japan
is now hanging on the edge of whether it can grab the chance of being
a role model in the world by overcoming this challenge or becoming a
Far Eastern state without vigour, where many old people live,” he
said.
Opponents
of the planned tax rise from the current five percent to 10 percent
by 2015, including a sizable rebellion in his own Democratic Party of
Japan (DPJ), say any increase in household bills would derail Japan’s
uncertain economic recovery.
The
bill will now go to the upper house where it is expected to pass
after deals Noda reached with opposition parties to navigate a
chamber his party does not control
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