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This is an archive article published on October 30, 2008

Japan unveils $277 bn bailout package

Japan's PM has unveiled a $277 bn stimulus package to weather the economic crisis.

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Japan’s Prime Minister Taro Aso on Thursday unveiled a USD 277 billion stimulus package for Asia’s largest economy to weather the global economic crisis, signalling he would hold off on high-risk elections.

Aso, trailing in polls and under pressure from the opposition to call snap elections, instead pressed parliament for quick approval of the 26.9 trillion yen (277 billion dollar) plan, including five trillion yen in new spending.

With the economy teetering on recession, the package’s highlight is sending back a total of two trillion yen (20.3 billion dollars) to all households.

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“The global financial crisis is a once-in-a-century event,” Aso told a nationally televised news conference.

“An overwhelming majority of people put importance on policies, especially economic measures, rather than political affairs,” he said.

The package includes cuts in tolls on expressways, tax breaks for housing loans and capital gains, along with support for child care, elderly care and regional economies.

Aso also pledged help for the growing number of young Japanese without steady jobs by giving businesses incentives to provide stable work to some 600,000 people.

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“In this kind of situation, we need to relieve people’s insecurities. We should not be fearful of the violent storm, nor should we just stand and let the typhoon blow us away,” Aso said.

But Credit Suisse economist Hiromichi Shirakawa doubted the package could stop Japan’s slowdown, saying that unemployment would likely rise as US and other countries’ demand for Japanese exports slumps.

“With tax breaks in a climate of heightened employment insecurity, we expect only limited stimulus effects on individual consumption and housing investment,” he wrote in a report.

Aso, who took over a month ago from the unpopular Yasuo Fukuda, breaks with predecessors in his Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) with his advocacy of government spending to boost the economy.

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But Aso said the government would not issue any new bonds, which would worsen Japan’s already ballooning public debt.

The package was far larger than some 1.81 trillion yen in new spending announced in late August by Fukuda to ease the impact of soaring commodity prices.

Parliament approved the package earlier this month, with the opposition supporting it. But the opposition has warned that further legislation will not have such an easy ride through parliament if Aso refuses to call elections.

The LDP chose Aso, a flamboyant campaigner, with a mission to lead them into elections, which must take place by September 2009.

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In another hint he would not call elections now, Aso noted that the United States, the world’s largest economy, was undergoing a transition period between presidents.

“I don’t think the world thinks it’s the best to see both the number one economic power in the world and the number two economic power, Japan, messing around with elections and what not,” Aso said.

But analysts said that the LDP’s main concern was losing. The party has been in power for all but 10 months since 1955 but has had four premiers over the past two years as it reels from corruption scandals and a slowing economy.

The Nikkei business daily estimated that the LDP would lose about 130 seats in the 480-member lower house if the election were held now, with the opposition taking the majority.

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