Takaichi vows growth push, defence reset


Hitting the ground running: Takaichi delivering her policy speech during the House of Representatives plenary session in Tokyo. — AFP

Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi pledged to make Japan “strong and prosperous”, while pledging to keep “hitting the growth button” following her party’s landslide election win.

Echoing her predecessor Shigeru Ishiba, Takaichi said that Japan was facing “the most severe and complex security environment” since World War II, citing not just China but also Russia and North Korea.

As a result, Takaichi said she will aim this year to revise Japan’s three key defence policy documents, as “changes in the security environment – such as the emergence of new ways of warfare and the need to prepare for prolonged conflicts – are accelerating across a wide range of fields”.

She added that she wanted to accelerate discussions on further loosening Japan’s self-imposed ban on the export of lethal wea­pons.

“This will contribute to strengthening the deterrence and response capabilities of our allies and like-minded partners, while also helping to reinforce Japan’s defence production base and its foundation of civilian technologies,” Takaichi said.

Takaichi, whose ruling LDP party won a two-thirds majority in Feb 8 snap elections, angered China by suggesting in November that Japan could intervene militarily if Beijing sought to take Taiwan by force.

China, which regards the democratic island as part of its territory and has not ruled out force to annex it, advised its citizens to avoid travel to Japan.

Beijing’s top diplomat Wang Yi told the Munich Security Confe­rence on Saturday that forces in Japan were seeking to “revive militarism”.

On the economy, Takaichi insisted that her fiscal policies will not be “reckless”, as investors worry that her efforts to boost growth and help consumers with inflation will swell Japan’s debts.

“We are not going to pursue a reckless fiscal policy that would undermine the market’s confidence,” Takaichi told parliament, undertaking to reduce Japan’s ratio of debt to gross domestic product.

“I will keep hitting that growth switch – again and again and again – pushing it as much as I possibly can,” she said.

She pledged to promote domestic investment in “risk management” areas such as energy, health, infrastructure and cybersecurity. — AFP

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