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Japan’s Draft Policy Roadmap Prioritizes Digitalization, Battling COVID-19 Fallout

Japan will prioritize efforts to digitalize its economy and better cope with the fallout from the coronavirus pandemic, leaving open how the huge cost of combating the crisis would be funded.

Image: Prime Minister Shinzo Abe. Source: Alexandros Michailidis / Shutterstock

By Daniel Leussink, Tetsushi Kajimoto

TOKYO (Reuters) – Japan will prioritize efforts to digitalize its economy and better cope with the fallout from the coronavirus pandemic, the government said in a draft policy framework that left open how the huge cost of combating the crisis would be funded.

The draft was presented at the Council on Economic and Fiscal Policy (CEFP), the government’s top economic panel, on Wednesday.

In more normal times, the policy focus would be on measures to rein in Japan’s huge public debt.

Instead, the government pledged to speed up digitalization of its outdated administration, which has hampered the swift delivery of payouts to households and firms hit by the virus.

“We’ll strongly promote the digitalization of our country’s society as a whole,” the draft document said.

The draft left out any explicit mention of the government’s target to achieve a primary budget surplus by fiscal 2025, a key move suggesting Tokyo is backing away from its commitment to rein in the country’s ballooning public debt.

The pandemic has forced Japan to compile two massive spending packages to cushion the economic blow, straining its already tattered finances and casting doubt on its ability to keep its fiscal house in order.

While the budget target has been seen as nearly impossible to meet, its omission could have dire consequences such as a downgrade in Japan’s sovereign debt credit rating, some analysts say.

“While the chance of an immediate downgrade is not large, the risk of one cannot be ruled out,” said Masaaki Kanno, chief economist at Sony Financial Holdings.

A Cabinet official said omitting mention of the budget surplus target didn’t mean the government’s fiscal policy had changed.

Reporting by Daniel Leussink and Tetsushi Kajimoto; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore.

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Source: Reuters

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