Japanese Prime Minister Abe Heads Into Election With Wide Lead
Posted: Mon Nov 24, 2014 9:09 am
Doesn't look like "trickle down economics" has been working for the common man. What will it take to pull Japan out of deflation once and for all?
The results show that support for the 60-year-old prime minister is fragile. His efforts to prop up the economy over the last two years have bolstered profits at many big companies, but ordinary voters complain they haven’t shared the benefits.
The world’s third-largest economy contracted in the July-September period, surprising economists who had largely expected a modest expansion. Consumer spending has been depressed by an increase in the consumption tax to 8% from 5%, in April.
Mr. Abe dissolved the lower house of parliament last week and said in an address to the nation that he had done so to seek public approval of his decision to postpone a planned second increase in the sales tax. The tax was scheduled to rise to 10% next October, but Mr. Abe pushed back the date by a year and a half in response to the disappointing economic data.
With total debt more than twice the size of the economy, Japan needs to shore up its fiscal position, analysts say. But with consumer sentiment remaining weak, postponing the tax increase is hardly an unpopular move.
http://online.wsj.com/articles/japan-pr ... 1416804416
The results show that support for the 60-year-old prime minister is fragile. His efforts to prop up the economy over the last two years have bolstered profits at many big companies, but ordinary voters complain they haven’t shared the benefits.
The world’s third-largest economy contracted in the July-September period, surprising economists who had largely expected a modest expansion. Consumer spending has been depressed by an increase in the consumption tax to 8% from 5%, in April.
Mr. Abe dissolved the lower house of parliament last week and said in an address to the nation that he had done so to seek public approval of his decision to postpone a planned second increase in the sales tax. The tax was scheduled to rise to 10% next October, but Mr. Abe pushed back the date by a year and a half in response to the disappointing economic data.
With total debt more than twice the size of the economy, Japan needs to shore up its fiscal position, analysts say. But with consumer sentiment remaining weak, postponing the tax increase is hardly an unpopular move.
http://online.wsj.com/articles/japan-pr ... 1416804416