Journalism of Courage

Japan PM Takaichi signals work on new fiscal target

She said her government would retain the current budget target for now but plans to replace it with a multi-year spending goal, easing Japan’s strict fiscal consolidation stance.

By: Reuters

TokyoNovember 10, 2025 08:49 AM IST First published on: Nov 10, 2025 at 08:49 AM IST
Japan PM Sanae TakaichiJapan under Takaichi has positioned itself as a steadying force that keeps the Quad’s momentum. (AP Photo)

Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi said on Monday she would instruct her cabinet in January next year to start work on setting a new fiscal target extending through several years. She said her administration would not ditch the current primary budget target immediately.

The remarks followed those she made on Friday that her government would ditch the current annual fiscal target in favour of one that measures spending through several years, essentially watering down the country’s commitment to fiscal consolidation.

Last week’s remarks from Takaichi, known as an advocate of big spending, signal a major shift from past administrations that used the annual target as a key tool to show Japan’s resolve to get its fiscal house in order in the long run.

Under a long-term fiscal blueprint set in June, the government said it will aim to deliver a primary budget surplus sometime through fiscal 2025 to 2026.

When asked about the target, Takaichi told parliament on Friday she would drop the idea of using the annual primary budget balance as Japan’s fiscal consolidation goal.

Instead, the government will check progress in fixing Japan’s finances “by looking at its balance in a span of several years,” she said.

The primary budget balance, which excludes new bond sales and debt-servicing costs, measures the extent to which policy measures can be funded without resorting to debt.

Japan has repeatedly pushed back the timeframe for achieving a primary budget surplus as past governments continued to deploy massive spending packages to reflate the economy and fend off shocks such as the pandemic.

Takaichi has repeatedly criticised the primary budget balance as out of sync with global standards and constraining Japan’s ability to use fiscal tools to prop up growth. Takaichi has said her administration will compile a spending package aimed at cushioning the blow from rising living costs, boosting investment in growth areas and defence.

Japan is saddled with public debt twice the size of its economy, which is the worst among major economies.

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