Japan challenges – is there really a labour shortage? – Part 5

I do not have much time to write today as I am moving house later this afternoon and have a few work meetings to attend before that. So the next topic might take two parts shorter parts. As predicted, Ms Takaichi became the first female Prime Minister for Japan on Tuesday after consolidating a coalition with the unlikely 日本維新の会 (Japan Innovation Party or Ishin for short), who are based in Osaka and is a sort-of right wing group that opposes central government in Tokyo and is a strange mixture of free market yet things like government-provided free education for all. It is an unlikely coalition that only a place like Japan could conjure up. But she is now PM and the ailing LDP elite rules on, although for how long is another matter. The new PM is, as I have indicated against using monetary policy as the main macroeconomic policy tool and favours further fiscal expansion under the new heading 責任ある積極財政 (Responsible and proactive fiscal policy), which was a term given to her by my research collaborator here at Kyoto University (Prof. Fujii), who will become one of her senior advisors in the new government. The question I am toying with as we prepare for this major symposium at the Diet on November 6, 2025, is what actual scope is there for fiscal expansion when we are told that there is a drastic labour shortage. That is what I am discussing in this part of the series today.

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