ラベル tackle の投稿を表示しています。 すべての投稿を表示
ラベル tackle の投稿を表示しています。 すべての投稿を表示

2011年9月14日水曜日

Japanese PM vows to tackle fiscal mess - Xinhua

Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda delivers a policy speech at a session of the House of Representatives in Tokyo on Sept. 13, 2011. Yoshihiko Noda said in the speech that the new government would spare no efforts to make Japan recover from the March quake and tsunami disasters. (Xinhua/Ji Chunpeng)


TOKYO, Sept. 13 (Xinhua) -- Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda said on Tuesday his government's primary focus is on revitalizing regions devastated by the March disasters and rescuing the nation from its dire financial predicament.


In his first major policy speech given at a special session of the Diet in Tokyo, Noda, Japan's third prime minister in two years, struck an emotional chord, vowing to deliver a watertight strategy by the end of this year to kick start the nation's sluggish economy and enhance restoration efforts in the wake of the March disasters that pummeled key infrastructures and left 20,000 people dead or unaccounted for.


"While overcoming the twin crises of the 'Great East Japan Earthquake' and the global economic crisis, we must invest in this country's future so people are filled with hope and each and every citizen can be proud and feel, 'I am glad I was born in this country'," said the prime minister, sworn in less than two weeks ago.


Noda called for the participation and cooperation from all parties involved in policy debate and planning to come together so that the necessary bills for reconstruction funds, social security and tax can be swiftly passed through a divided parliament in which the opposition bloc hold power in the upper house.


Noda's predecessor, Naoto Kan, failed to garner opposition support in his tenure as prime minister and leader of the Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ), meaning the Liberal Democratic Party-led opposition bloc could create policy deadlock to force the DPJ to oust their unpopular leader and compromise on key policy initiatives.


The new prime minister has hand-picked a Cabinet and a string of ministers to quell the DPJ in-fighting that plagued both Kan and Yukio Hatoyama who led the DPJ and the country before him.


"I will steadily carry out specific measures one by one," Noda said referring to restoration efforts in areas on the pacific basin leveled by the March's 9.0-magnitude earthquake and ensuing tsunami.


Noda also pledged to take "three tough paths" toward cuts in spending, increases in tax revenue by revitalizing the economy, and changes in the state revenue structure through a greater financial burden on the public, referring to his plans for the nation's fiscal rehabilitation.


The Japanese government is expected to submit to parliament in October a massive, yet essential reconstruction funding bill, expected to top 130 billion U.S. dollars, but Noda, known as a fiscal hawk in his previous position as Japan's finance minister, said he would also comprehensively address Japan's fundamental economic maladies, which currently threaten the nation's financial well-being for generations to come.


"Japan's credibility is on the verge of being severely damaged due to industry hollowing out and deteriorating fiscal conditions, " Noda said.


"We cannot carry on forever with a kind of fiscal management where debt keeps piling up in a snowball effect," said the prime minister in relation to the nation's ballooning public debt, now double the size of its five trillion U.S. dollar economy and set to grow as the population continues to decrease and the number of retirees needing state support swell.


The yen's recent surge, a bane of Noda's previous tenure as chief of the finance ministry as the currency has peaked at record post-Word War II highs, is also firmly in Noda's sight, as a persistently strong yen threatens to derail the nation's fragile export-led economic recovery.


"The yen's historic rise, coupled with catch-ups by emerging nations, has caused a crisis of unprecedented industrial hollowing- out," Noda reiterated.


"We hear screams from exporters and from the small and mid- sized companies that have led our country's industries. If things carry on like this, domestic industries could go downhill and jobs could be lost," the prime minister added.


"If that happens, it would be almost impossible to break out of deflation and reconstruct areas hit by the disaster," said Noda.


Japan has made three forays into currency markets to stem the yen's rise, all of which made little impact and forced some of Japan's blue-chip exporters to downwardly revise their earnings outlook.


View the original article here

2011年9月6日火曜日

Quick steps to tackle strong yen needed: Japanese econ ministers

TOKYO (Reuters) – Economics Minister Motohisa Furukawa said on Sunday he and three other economy-related ministers in Japan agreed that measures to respond to a firmer yen need to be compiled quickly to alleviate the negative effect of the currency's appreciation on the domestic economy.

The agreement follows Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda's comment on Friday that Japan is facing an unprecedented crisis where industry is hollowing out because of a strong yen.

The three other members of the newly formed Noda's cabinet were Finance Minister Jun Azumi, Trade and Energy Minister Yoshio Hachiro, and Tatsuo Hirano, who is in charge of reconstruction following a massive quake and tsunami in March.

In the first meeting of the Noda government's economy-related ministers, no concrete steps were discussed, Furukawa said.

Azumi said earlier on Sunday he will keep an eye on speculative moves in the currency market and take a decisive step if necessary, in a sign he will follow the footsteps of his predecessor Noda, who as finance minister, led currency intervention three times to curb the yen's rise.

(Reporting by Shinji Kitamura, writing by Kiyoshi Takenaka; Editing by Ed Lane)


View the original article here

2011年9月5日月曜日

Quick steps to tackle strong yen needed: Japanese econ ministers (Reuters)

TOKYO (Reuters) – Economics Minister Motohisa Furukawa said on Sunday he and three other economy-related ministers in Japan agreed that measures to respond to a firmer yen need to be compiled quickly to alleviate the negative effect of the currency's appreciation on the domestic economy.

The agreement follows Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda's comment on Friday that Japan is facing an unprecedented crisis where industry is hollowing out because of a strong yen.

The three other members of the newly formed Noda's cabinet were Finance Minister Jun Azumi, Trade and Energy Minister Yoshio Hachiro, and Tatsuo Hirano, who is in charge of reconstruction following a massive quake and tsunami in March.

In the first meeting of the Noda government's economy-related ministers, no concrete steps were discussed, Furukawa said.

Azumi said earlier on Sunday he will keep an eye on speculative moves in the currency market and take a decisive step if necessary, in a sign he will follow the footsteps of his predecessor Noda, who as finance minister, led currency intervention three times to curb the yen's rise.

(Reporting by Shinji Kitamura, writing by Kiyoshi Takenaka; Editing by Ed Lane)


View the original article here

2011年8月31日水曜日

Japan's new leader Yoshihiko Noda to tackle post-tsunami crisis - The Independent

Finance Minister Noda will become Japan's next prime minister after defeating Trade Minister Banri Kaieda in the ruling party leadership run-off vote REUTERS

Finance Minister Noda will become Japan's next prime minister after defeating Trade Minister Banri Kaieda in the ruling party leadership run-off vote

A hawkish fiscal and foreign policy conservative who supports nuclear power will be sworn in today as Japan's sixth prime minister in five years.

Finance Minister Yoshihiko Noda, 54, faces the huge task of clearing up after the March quake and tsunami, ending the nuclear crisis in Fukushima and tackling the country’s enormous public debt.

He was elected head of the ruling Democrats (DPJ) yesterday after beating Trade Minister Banri Kaieda, in a poll that exposed the party’s growing divisions. Mr Noda will replace Naoto Kan, who resigned last week following withering criticism for his government’s response to the March 11 disaster.

The new leader yesterday he urged the party and the disaster-hit nation to “sweat together” with him as he works to bail Japan out of its worst crisis in decades.

Mr Noda became the latest Japanese politician to rile Asia this month when he denied that Japan’s wartime leaders were criminals. Quizzed by reporters on August 15, the anniversary of Japan’s surrender in World War Two, Mr Noda refused to rule out a prime ministerial visit to Yasukuni Shrine, which honours the nation’s war dead, including 14 executed Class-A war criminals.

The statements were condemned in China and South Korea, where one newspaper called them reminiscent of “ultra-rightist and militaristic elements.

Mr Noda has warned about China’s growing military clout and strongly defended Japan’s half-century military alliance with the US, which he calls “essential for Japan’s security and prosperity.” His position marks a clear break with his DPJ predecessor Yukio Hatoyama, who favoured closer links with China and a more independent defence policy.

Yesterday’s election effectively terminates the DPJ’s left-leaning programme, which began two years ago after Mr Hatoyama ended over half a century of virtual one-party rule by the conservative Liberal Democratic Party (LDP). Mr Noda opposes large-scale welfare spending and wants to raise the consumption tax to pay for reconstruction. His foreign policy pronouncements put him closer to the old LDP.

Japanese voters are hoping for stable leadership after a string of short-lived prime ministers since 2006. Mr Noda’s predecessor Naoto Kan was the first leader in five years to last more than 12 months. The bickering and infighting that characterised his last months in office recalled for many the worst moments of the discredited LDP.

The prime minister’s first task will be uniting the divided ruling party, long dominated by a faction loyal to kingpin Ichiro Ozawa, one of its key architects. Mr Ozawa backed Mr Noda’s rival Banri Kaieda, who lost 177 to 215 votes, raising the long-threatened specter of the DPJ’s disintegration. He must also tackle the record-high strength of the yen, which is forcing many manufacturers to consider moving abroad.

Mr Noda has not backed Naoto Kan’s call for a rethink of nuclear power and says the nation’s reactors must be restarted. Yesterday Greenpeace called on the new leader to delay the opening of schools in Fukushima City this week after testing found high radiation levels from the crippled Fukushima nuclear plant in a pre-school, secondary school and child care centre.


View the original article here