Japan’s budget to hit record, but with reduced new bond issuance, Reuters reports

Japan’s budget to hit record, but with reduced new bond issuance, Reuters reports


Pedestrians walk past the Finance Ministry building in Tokyo March 13, 2009.

Toru Hanai | Reuters

Japan’s government is set to compile a record $735 billion budget for the fiscal year from April due to larger social security and debt-servicing costs, adding to the industrial world’s heaviest debt, a draft seen by Reuters showed.

The 115.5 trillion yen draft budget is being compiled as the Bank of Japan shifts away from its decade-long stimulus program, putting more burden on the government to stimulate the economy.

In an attempt to improve public finances, however, the government plans to trim new bond issuance next fiscal year to 28.6 trillion yen from this fiscal year’s initially planned 35.4 trillion yen, helped by tax revenue growth, the draft showed.

It is the first time in 17 years that new bond issuance will drop below 30 trillion yen.

Decades of stop-start fiscal spending and reform have left Japan with the industrial world’s heaviest public debt burden — more than double the size of its annual economic output.

The BOJ’s retreat from a decade of radical stimulus adds to pressure on Japan’s fiscal health, as the government can no longer count on the central bank to effectively bankroll debt.

Both the Fed and the BOJ 'don't know what they're doing': Steve Hanke

The BOJ ended negative interest rates in March and raised its short-term policy target to 0.25% in July. Governor Kazuo Ueda signaled on Wednesday that the next rate hike is nearing, saying wage and price developments indicate the economy will move closer to sustainably achieving the central bank’s 2% inflation target next year.

The draft budget, up from this fiscal year’s 112.6 trillion yen, is expected to be approved by Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba’s cabinet on Friday for submission to parliament for deliberation early next year.

Tax revenue is projected to rise 8.8 trillion yen from this year’s initial estimate to a record 78.4 trillion yen, thanks in part to a recovery in corporate profits, according to the draft.

The primary budget balance, which excludes new bond sales and debt servicing costs, will be in deficit of less than 1 trillion yen, keeping alive the possibility of achieving the government’s goal of delivering a primary budget surplus by the next fiscal year.

The budget draft assumes the yield on the benchmark 10-year government bond rises to 2% next fiscal year from this year’s 1.9%, topping 2% for the first time in 13 years.

That would boost debt-servicing costs for interest payments and debt redemption to 28.2 trillion yen from 27 trillion yen for this fiscal year.

The government on Wednesday revised its economic outlook, estimating the real economic growth rate for the current fiscal year at 0.4%, down from 0.7% projected in November as a Chinese economic slowdown weighed on exports.

The growth projection for the next fiscal year was kept at 1.2%.



Source

Buying chip stocks is getting pricey. Traders don’t care
World

Buying chip stocks is getting pricey. Traders don’t care

Intel Xeon 6 processors are shown to CNBC at Intel’s advanced packaging facility in Chandler, Arizona, on November 17, 2025. Tony Puyol Semiconductors are a runaway train — up 17 of the past 18 sessions — and options traders are buying increasingly expensive call options to chase the rally higher. The VanEck Semiconductor ETF (SMH) […]

Read More
The charts are showing there’s more pain ahead for healthcare stocks, says Carter Worth
World

The charts are showing there’s more pain ahead for healthcare stocks, says Carter Worth

(Check out Carter’s worthcharting.com for actionable recommendations and live nightly videos.) The worst performing sector year to date is healthcare, and there is every indication there is more downside ahead. The 2-panel chart below tells the tale. The top panel is the Health Care Select Sector SPDR ETF (XLV) itself, and it is a bad […]

Read More
How a new Amazon-backed Hollywood production startup deploys AI for speed and cost-cutting
World

How a new Amazon-backed Hollywood production startup deploys AI for speed and cost-cutting

At a time when Hollywood is torn between fear of artificial intelligence stealing jobs and the pressure to cut costs, a new kind of hybrid production studio is launching with the latest AI tools. Innovative Dreams is a new production services company, backed by Amazon Web Services and Luma, a generative AI startup, that combines […]

Read More