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The Japan News/Yomiuri
The Japan News/Yomiuri
Comment
Editorial

Risky to increase expenditures that rely on debt in FY21 budget plan

It is important to carefully examine how funds should be used effectively, to curb the expansion of the budget while taking every possible measure to prevent the spread of the infectious disease.

The government has adopted its fiscal 2021 budget plan, calling for a record 106.6 trillion yen in total general account spending, an increase of about 4 trillion yen from the initial budget for fiscal 2020.

The increase is said to have come as the government earmarked 5 trillion yen as a reserve fund to deal with the coronavirus pandemic. The budget plan also includes funds to strengthen systems for public health centers and research on infectious diseases.

As the number of newly infected patients and people with serious symptoms continues to increase, expense should not be spared in supporting the medical system.

The promotion of digitization and decarbonization to reduce greenhouse gas emissions are also important issues.

With the aim of creating a digital agency, as the Cabinet of Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga has pledged to do, the government has earmarked a total of about 300 billion yen across different ministries and agencies for the development of information systems at related bodies. As for environmental issues, measures were expanded to support the use of hydrogen as fuel, among other actions.

Expenditures in growth areas that encourage companies to invest in them are important.

The question is how to streamline other expenditures.

Spending for social security -- such as pension, medical and nursing care services -- which accounts for one-third of expenditures, totaled 35.8 trillion yen, a slight increase from the initial budget for fiscal 2020.

The government is said to have limited the natural growth in social security costs due to the aging of the population to 350 billion yen by saving about 100 billion yen through cutting official drug prices for many items.

However, the pace of increase in social security spending is expected to accelerate in 2022, when the baby-boom generation will begin to turn 75 years old. A certain conclusion on raising the out-of-pocket burden of medical costs on elderly people has been reached. It is hoped that discussions will further continue on social security system reform, to strike a more appropriate balance between benefits and burdens.

Public works spending remained almost unchanged at 6.1 trillion yen. But as more than 2 trillion yen was included as money mainly to strengthen the nation's resilience to disasters in the third supplementary budget for fiscal 2020, total public works spending is on the increase.

Although it is vital to deal with frequent floods, the government should not allow nonessential, nonurgent projects to be slipped into public works expenditures. It is hoped that public works spending will be thoroughly examined in the Diet deliberations.

The fiscal 2020 budget finally ballooned to about 176 trillion yen from the initial budget of about 103 trillion yen through three supplementary budgets. The issuance of new government bonds reached an unprecedented total of 112.6 trillion yen. In fiscal 2021, when tax revenues are expected to decline, the government also plans to issue 43.6 trillion yen in new government bonds, up about 30% from the initial budget for fiscal 2020.

If the coronavirus pandemic is prolonged, pressure to make additional fiscal expenditures could intensify. It is necessary to be cautious about a situation in which an indulgent assessment of a supplementary budget could lead to an increase in the budget. The government should be keenly aware that increasing expenditures that are dependent on debt is not sustainable.

-- The original Japanese article appeared in The Yomiuri Shimbun on Dec. 22, 2020.

Read more from The Japan News at https://japannews.yomiuri.co.jp/

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