Society | Dec 10

Suga raises bet on Japan's Go To Travel campaign with Y73.6 trillion package

Dec 10 (Japan Times) - Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga has doubled down on his bet that promoting domestic travel will keep the economy on a recovery path and that his tenure as leader will continue beyond a single year.

Despite a resurgence in COVID-19 infections that some observers have blamed on Suga’s Go To Travel campaign, the government on Tuesday unveiled a six-month extension of the program as part of an economic stimulus package with an overall value of ¥73.6 trillion.

The latest package, to be funded by a third extra budget and next year’s annual budget, also extends an enhanced furlough program while providing support for medical facilities, homes for older people and cash handouts for single parent families. The move adds to an IMF tally of $12 trillion in global stimulus this year.

Japan's package also looks to shore up corporate cash flows, and promote the development of green and digital technology, two areas Suga is looking to make central themes of his tenure.

The prime minister said the measures would boost the economy by 3.6 percentage points, but didn’t clarify the yardstick or time period he was referring to.

Suga is trying to shore up an economy expected to lose momentum after it clawed back about half of its pandemic losses during faster-than-initially estimated growth in the summer.

With support for his Cabinet falling amid the uptick in virus cases, he needs to balance the need to prop up growth against the risk of fanning the outbreak.


MORE Society NEWS

The official Instagram account of the Imperial Household Agency, launched on April 1, has been actively sharing updates about the activities of Their Majesties the Emperor and Empress.

During each conflict, children are invariably forced into the fray, a grim reality that remains lesser-known from World War II -- Japanese child soldiers involved in developing bacteriological weapons.

A recent incident involving a foreign man who intentionally boarded a women-only train car and filmed passengers and the interior, posting the footage on social media, has sparked significant controversy and discussion regarding privacy and legal boundaries in Japan.

POPULAR NEWS

The site of the former Tsukiji Market is set for a major transformation, including a stadium with a capacity of 50,000 people and a launch pad for flying cars.

The Nagoya District Court delivered a severe sentence on Monday to Mai Watanabe, 25, who operated under the alias "Itadakijoshi Riri-chan (Riri the sugar baby)" and was charged with fraudulently obtaining cash from men. She has been sentenced to nine years in prison and fined 8 million yen.

In a historic move, the Japan Fair Trade Commission (JFTC) has issued its first administrative sanction against American tech giant Google.

Los Angeles Dodgers' Shohei Ohtani has surpassed Hideki Matsui to become the Japanese player with the most home runs in Major League Baseball, hitting his 176th homer.

Police have arrested a man in his twenties, who had previously surrendered to authorities in Tokyo, following the discovery of two burned bodies in Nasu, Tochigi, admitting to lending his car but denying involvement in the killings.

FOLLOW US