Political Uncertainty in Japan Clouding Rate Hikes, Budget

Asian Financial Daily
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Political uncertainty hovers in Japan’s fragile economy, analysts say policy paralysis could hinder the drafting of next year’s budget and the timing of the central bank’s next interest rate.

The ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) calls on Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba to resign and take responsibility – The Party’s Great Failure in the House of Lords Election In July and last year’s House of Commons polls.

Ishiba denied that he had plans to resign, but his declined support raised questions about his future, with analysts saying leadership changes could have an impact on the prospects of fiscal and monetary policy.

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At a meeting on Friday, lawmakers decided to consider a rare leadership contest, even if the party leader still presided over. Under the provisions of the non-people development agenda, such race will be held if the majority of the party’s legislators and district heads agree to hold a contest.

But it is not yet certain how long the party will decide for the decision, according to lawmakers and government officials familiar with the process.

The game could be held as early as September, they said, which would allow the new administration to compile a spending package to mitigate the economic blow to U.S. tariffs.

However, if the game is not played in September, it may have to wait until early next year to avoid disrupting the government’s drafting of the next fiscal year’s budget.

“We wouldn’t be surprised if the U.S. Nationalist Party held a leadership election in September,” UBS analysts said in a research note. “It seems that uncertainty about politics is unlikely to be resolved anytime soon.”

“New leaders need to build new alliances”

In Japan, the Ministry of Finance collected the ministries’ expenditure requirements in August and completed the government’s draft budget in late December. The budget must be passed in time to parliament before it can start with new members in April.

Failure to pass the budget by parliament will force the government to compile and limit the budget, which could damage the economy by causing delays in spending.

Some lawmakers from the ruling party said there was no choice but to let Ishiba resign to resolve the deadlock.

After losing control in two parliaments in both parliaments, the ruling coalition led by the LDP needs the support of the opposition to pass legislation and budget through parliament. The opposition ruled out forming a coalition unless Ispibon resigned.

“Japan needs a stable coalition government. Otherwise, it is impossible to adopt a consistent policy,” Ken Saito, a Nature Party heavyweight, told Reuters last week. “The most damn thing is the best to seek alliance partners under the new leader.”

“The shed must be waited and seen”

Ishiba’s weak political status and long-term political uncertainty also complicated the Bank of Japan’s decision on how long to restore interest rates.

While few analysts expect sheds to raise interest rates at their next policy meeting in September, more data will be available next October, December or January for the impact of U.S. tariffs on the economy.

Ishiba, known as the fiscal eagle, has recognized central banks’ efforts to gradually suppress the economy from a decade of massive stimulus, as inflation still surpasses its 2% target within three years.

But his fierce election defeat left his administration vulnerable to attacks demanding substantial spending and loose monetary policy.

Many opposition parties have urged the exhibition to raise interest rates and focus on supporting the economy at speed, or slowly extend.

If the least developed countries hold leadership competitions, the event may bring attention to the views of candidates such as Sanae Takaichi, a reflexive MP who has exploded the idea of rising interest rates as “stupid.”

All of this could prevent BOJ from raising interest rates in the coming months to avoid unnecessary political attention.

“We can only say that we will continue to adopt appropriate policies to achieve our 2% inflation target sustainably and stably,” Governor Kazuo Ueda told the press conference.

“It is impossible to predict how politics will develop,” a source familiar with the bank’s thinking said. “It means the best thing to do is to wait and see.”

  • Jim Pollard’s additional editor Reuters

See also:

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S South Korea will invest $45 billion in U.S. projects; get 15% tariff

Japanese Prime Minister Ishiba vows despite losing the House of Lords

Japan, South Korea is eager to cut tariffs by 25% by August

Trump’s tariffs shock the Asian economy, fear of trade war

Jim Pollard

Jim Pollard has been an Australian journalist in Thailand since 1999. He worked for News Ltd in Sydney, Perth, London and Melbourne, and then passed SE Asia in the late 1990s. He has been a senior editor in the United States for 17 years.

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