Chinese Agencies Working to Boost Consumption

More signs the western educated kids are taking charge.
Instead of the public sector spending more than it’s ‘income’
seems they are working on expanding private sector debt?
And tax cuts for institutional investors to buy equities?

Good luck to them…

Chinese Agencies Working on Fiscal Steps to Boost Consumption

Jan 18 (Bloomberg) — Commerce Ministry spokesman Shen Danyang says his agency, central bank and finance ministry are working on such steps

* China will support wider use of credit, bank cards

* Agencies will submit plan to State Council

* NOTE: State-run China Securities Journal today reported govt may introduce tax cuts, other preferential policies for institutional investors to encourage long-term stockholding

Azumi: Not Immune To Europe-Style Fiscal Crisis

And, unfortunately, they are acting accordingly, ensuring another lost decade and further destruction of their culture.

Azumi: Not Immune To Europe-Style Fiscal Crisis

By Kelly Olsen

Jan 18 (Dow Jones) — Finance Minister Jun Azumi said Wednesday that Japan is not immune to a euro-zone style fiscal crisis and that the government is “resolved” to raise the consumption tax to improve the nation’s finances.

Japan is “no exception,” Azumi said during a speech at the Foreign Correspondents’ Club of Japan, referring to the crisis in Europe in light of Japan’s own high debt levels.

Azumi said that although yields on Japanese government bonds are currently low, rates can quickly rise to “cause problems.”

“We cannot avert our eyes” from the problem of Japan’s outstanding debt, he said, which at around 200% of gross domestic product is the highest in the industrialized world.

Azumi said the government is resolved to raise the consumption tax rate to help bring the country’s finances under control, but acknowledged the difficulties in getting the legislation passed, saying it is “like climbing Mt. Everest.”

Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda aims to submit legislation to double the tax to 10% by 2015 to a parliamentary session set to begin next week, though the unpopular move is opposed by opposition parties and has sparked defections from Noda’s ruling Democratic Party of Japan.