Japan to target $2.3 trillion public-private investment by 2040, Nikkei reports

TOKYO, June 20 (Reuters) – Japan plans to set a target of about $2.3 trillion in combined public ​and private investment by 2040 across ‌17 strategic sectors as part of Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s new growth strategy, the Nikkei reported ​on Friday.
The 370 trillion yen investment ​initiative, to be unveiled as early as ⁠next week, will focus on areas such ​as AI, chips and space development, as ​Takaichi seeks to use government spending to spur private-sector investment, the business daily said, without citing a ​source for the information.
A call by Reuters ​to the Prime Minister’s Office on Saturday to seek ‌comment ⁠went unanswered outside business hours.
The government is considering creating a multi-year budget framework to ensure stable funding for investments deemed critical to ​economic security, ​some of ⁠which may be financed through bridging bonds.
Bridging bonds are used to ​cover temporary funding needs and are ​issued ⁠with guarantees on specific means to pay for redemption, allowing the heavily indebted government ⁠to ​argue that it is mindful ​of fiscal discipline even as it boosts spending.
($1 = 161.2800 ​yen)

Read more Zelenskiy says Belarus should remove equipment used in attacks on Ukraine in one week

Read more China tightens indium export checks as AI demand increases

Read more Bolivia’s Paz declares emergency over blockade crisis, paving way to deploy military

Related Posts

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *