By Tetsushi Kajimoto
TOKYO (Reuters) – Japan’s government pledged on Friday to keep its goal of achieving a primary budget surplus by fiscal 2025, with a caveat that the target will be reassessed this fiscal year due to COVID-19 pandemic, leaving room for a possible delay in fiscal reform.
The first annual economic policy blueprint under Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga underscored the need to strike a delicate balance between spurring post-pandemic growth and curbing the industrial world’s heaviest public debt burden.
There was no change in the blueprint to its wording on the fiscal target from an earlier draft, in which the government said it would “aim to bring the primary balance into a surplus by fiscal 2025 while stably lowering the debt-to-GDP ratio.”
“However, we will reassess the timeframe by the end of the current fiscal year, while considering the still unstable economic and fiscal situation due to the pandemic’s impact,” read the blueprint, which was approved by the cabinet on Friday.
The blueprints provide a basis for the next fiscal year’s budget. Last year, it dropped the reference to the timeframe for the first time, as Japan had rolled out huge spending packages to ease the pain from the pandemic.
The government’s plan leaves some wiggle room in the budget timeframe as it comes under pressure from some ruling party lawmakers seeking even bigger spending and as the country’s economic recovery remains fragile.
“It’s difficult to achieve a primary budget surplus in fiscal 2025, as coronavirus impacts linger in public finances while pressure will mount on boosting green-related spending,” said Takuya Hoshino, economist at Dai-ichi Life Research Institute.
The blueprint cited green, digital, local regions and childcare as key areas of investment to drive growth in the post-coronavirus era.
“Japan could debate corporate tax hike to meet necessary fiscal demand for greener society, following the footsteps of Britain and the united States,” Hoshino said.
Having pushed back the target a few times, Japan has pledged to meet a primary budget surplus, which excludes new bond sales and debt servicing costs, by the fiscal year-end in March 2026.
(Reporting by Tetsushi Kajimoto; Editing by Kim Coghill)