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MY FATHER'S ADVICE... 1. Not everything will go as you expect in your life. This is why you need to drop expectations and go with the flow. 2.Reduce bitterness from your life, that shit delays blessings! 3. Dating a supportive woman is everything. 4. If you want to be successful, you must respect one rule - Never lie to yourself. 5. If your parents always count on you, don't play the same game with those who count on their parents. 6. Chase goals, not people. 7. Your 20's are your selfish years, build yourself, choose yourself first at all cost. 8. Detachment is power. Release anything that doesn't bring you peace. 9. Only speak when your words are more beautiful than your silence. 10. Invest in your looks. Do it for no one else but yourself. When you look good, you feel good. Normalize dressing well, you're broke not mad. 11. Some people want to see everything go wrong for you because nothing is going right for them. 12. Being a good person doesn't get you lov...

Japanese government considers large-scale stimulus package for growth


Japanese government considers large-scale stimulus package for growth

Description: https://news.cgtn.com/news/3149544e7855544f7a496a4e3051444d78557a4e31457a6333566d54/img/46e29e7072224629a3785af29a674785/46e29e7072224629a3785af29a674785.pngJapanese government is considering putting together a large-scale economic stimulus package with fiscal spending exceeding 92 billion U.S. dollars, the Nikkei newspaper said, as soft global demand and the U.S.-China trade war dampen the country's fragile recovery.
Adding strain to Japan's tattered finances, the government will issue more bonds to fund public works spending of up to four trillion yen (36.82 billion U.S. dollars) and make up for tax revenue shortfalls as firms feel the pinch from the trade tensions, the newspaper said on Saturday.

Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's administration will finalize the package early next week after consultations with the ruling coalition, the Nikkei said, without citing sources.

Japan's finance ministry officials were not immediately available for comment.

Ruling party lawmakers have been pressuring the government to compile a big spending package, increasing the chance fiscal policy will play a bigger role in supporting growth despite the risk of more debt issuance.

Bank of Japan governor Haruhiko Kuroda said on Friday the central bank's ultra-loose policy is aimed at hitting its price target, not at funding government spending, warning against complacency in getting Japan's fiscal house in order.
Fiscal spending under the package will likely exceed 10 trillion yen, which will be funded by a supplementary budget for the current fiscal year ending in March 2020 and next year's annual budget, the newspaper said.

That will roughly match a 13.5-trillion-yen spending package put together in 2016, when Britain's vote to exit the European Union jolted markets and heightened uncertainty over Japan's export-reliant economy.

The package under work will include spending for disaster relief, infrastructure building and measures to help companies boost productivity, the newspaper said.

The government will also issue more deficit-covering bonds, as tax revenues for the current fiscal year will undershoot its initial estimate by around two trillion yen, the Nikkei said.

Aside from the fiscal spending, Japan will also provide financing to companies for overseas investment to help them diversify production, Reuters reported on Thursday.

Japan's economic growth slumped to its weakest in a year in the third quarter as soft global demand knocked exports, stoking fears of a recession. Some analysts also fret a sales tax hike in October could cool private consumption.
Source(s): Reuters

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