A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Wednesday, June 1, 2016
Japan PM to postpone sales tax rise, snap election off table for now
Japan's
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe (R) and Deputy Prime Minister and Finance
Minister Taro Aso attend a parliament session for a no-confidence motion
against Abe's cabinet, submitted by four opposition parties at the
parliament in Tokyo, Japan May 31, 2016.REUTERS/TORU HANAI
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe is expected to announce on Wednesday
that the government will delay a scheduled sales tax hike by
two-and-a-half years, but will likely bow to pressure from his coalition
partner not to call a snap general election.
The tax delay, which had been widely expected, will be welcomed by
voters, who will cast ballots in an upper house election in July. But it
is fanning doubts about Abe's plans to curb Japan's huge public debt
and fund ballooning social welfare costs of a fast-ageing population.
It would be the second time that Abe has delayed the increase in the
sales tax to 10 percent from 8 percent, after a rise from 5 percent in
April 2014 tipped the economy back into recession. Abe took office in
December 2012 pledging to beat deflation and reboot the moribund economy
with his "Abenomics" revival recipe, but has made little headway amid
stubbornly weak domestic and export demand.
"From an economic standpoint, the market is likely to view the delay as a
positive surprise for domestic demand," said Lee Jin Yang, macro
research analyst for Aberdeen Asset Management in Singapore.
Abe, whose term as ruling Liberal Democratic Party president and hence,
premier, ends in September 2018 unless the LDP changes its rules, has
repeatedly said he would implement the tax rise as planned unless the
economy faced a shock from a financial crisis or natural disaster.
But he laid the groundwork for a delay at last week's Group of Seven
summit, insisting his G7 partners shared a "strong sense of crisis"
about the global economic outlook and drawing parallels to the 2008
world financial crisis that followed the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers.
Government officials have said Abe has not abandoned a pledge to bring
the country's primary budget balance into the black by the fiscal year
from April 2020 to rein in public debt which is already more than double
annual economic output.
But that target had already looked elusive, even with the government's
rosy forecast of real economic growth of 2 percent on average in coming
years.
Abe will also need to explain to voters how he plans to make up for the
funding gap from the tax hike delay to October 2019, and keep pledges to
beef up support for the elderly.
Speculation had simmered that Abe would call an election for
parliament's powerful lower house as he did in 2014 after announcing the
first tax hike delay, aiming to lock in his ruling bloc's two-thirds
"super majority" in the lower house and win a similar grip on the upper
chamber.
No lower house poll need be held until 2018.
(Reporting by Linda Sieg, Tetsushi Kajimoto and Leika Kihara in Tokyo, Masayuki Kitano in Singapore; Editing by Kim Coghill)