Japan secures support for ¥122 trillion FY2026 budget amid market concerns

The fiscal 2026 budget under Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi has gained support from the Democratic Party for the People, raising prospects of passage in its original form. However, as the first budget with debt-servicing expenses exceeding ¥30 trillion, insufficient curbs on social security spending have failed to allay market concerns. Rising interest rates pose a risk.

Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi's administration, since taking office in October 2025, has prioritized economic growth over immediate fiscal reconstruction. The fiscal 2026 budget totals ¥122 trillion, marking the first time debt-servicing expenses, including principal and interest, exceed ¥30 trillion. Takaichi told reporters on Friday, “While also taking fiscal discipline into consideration, we have worked on a budget that will harmonize a strong economy with sustainable public finances.”

Markets remain wary of this expansionary fiscal shift. The yield on newly issued 10-year government bonds rose to 2.1%, its highest in 27 years, from around 1.6% before Takaichi's tenure, amid concerns over deteriorating public finances and Bank of Japan rate hikes. The fiscal 2025 supplementary budget swelled to over ¥18 trillion, the largest in the post-pandemic era, and the annual primary budget surplus target was abandoned.

Politically, the ruling coalition of the Liberal Democratic Party and Japan Innovation Party, a minority in the House of Councillors, has secured support from the Democratic Party for the People, ensuring a majority. DPFP leader Yuichiro Tamaki stated, “We will cooperate on the budget proposal,” after demands like reviewing the annual income barrier for income tax were met. This paves the way for smooth deliberations in the January ordinary Diet session. The Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan criticizes it as “extravagant spending” and plans an alternative, but uniting opposition is challenging.

Social security expenses, one-third of total spending and the budget's main component, see only halfway reforms. Compensation to medical institutions for labor costs rose over 3% for the first time in 30 years, accepting the Health Ministry's full request despite Finance Ministry's push for 0.5%. Patient copayments under the high-cost medical expense system will increase, but scaled back from the previous Ishiba administration's proposal, saving about ¥150 billion while expenses still rise ¥760 billion from fiscal 2025. The assumed interest rate for bond calculations jumped to 3.0% from 2.0%, ballooning interest payments by ¥2.5 trillion. Future refinancing of low-rate bonds could surge costs further. The government plans a new fiscal reconstruction target in the summer 2026 Basic Policy on Economic and Fiscal Management and Reform.

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Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi addresses parliament, pushing for economic package and opposition support in a tense session.
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Takaichi pushes economic package in parliament, seeks opposition support

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Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi expressed determination to swiftly compile an economic package focused on combating rising prices during a question-and-answer session in the House of Representatives on November 5, calling for opposition cooperation. Opposition parties pressed for consumption tax cuts and delays in social security reforms, while the government offered responses lacking concrete measures. The ruling coalition lacks a majority in both houses, making broad cross-party support essential.

Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi's cabinet approved a record ¥122.3 trillion draft budget for fiscal 2026 on December 26, following the ruling parties' endorsement of a related tax reform plan the prior week. The budget boosts social security and defense spending and will go to parliament on January 23.

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The Japanese government adopted its fiscal 2026 budget bill on Friday, allocating a record ¥39.06 trillion for social security-related expenses, an increase of ¥760 billion from fiscal 2025. This rise reflects growing medical and nursing care costs due to an aging population. However, efforts to ease the health insurance premium burden on the working generation remain limited.

As campaigning unfolds for Japan's 2026 Lower House election, Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi is leaning toward temporarily reducing the consumption tax on food to zero. Caution prevails within the Liberal Democratic Party over fiscal implications, with implementation hinging on post-election discussions. The move aims to address voter concerns amid opposition pushes for tax relief.

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S&P Global Ratings has voiced concerns that Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi's proposal to cut the sales tax on food purchases could reduce Japan's revenues and undermine its finances in the long term. The remarks come amid a historic rise in superlong bond yields following Takaichi's announcement to lower the sales tax on food for two years if she succeeds in a snap election. Rain Yin, director of sovereign ratings based in Singapore, warned that such tax cuts are not a one-off impact and would exacerbate the fiscal situation if economic and revenue growth weakens amid structural increases in expenditures.

President Lee Jae Myung is set to deliver a speech on Tuesday outlining the 2026 budget. The government has proposed a record 728 trillion won budget, but partisan disputes raise doubts about passage by the December 2 deadline. Tensions center on expansionary fiscal policies and key initiatives.

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Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi has enjoyed tailwinds since taking office on October 21, with high approval ratings and an ambitious policy agenda. In 2026, however, she must demonstrate to voters that she can meet their expectations through steady leadership and concrete solutions to national challenges. Like Charles Dickens' 'Great Expectations,' these high hopes could become her biggest test.

 

 

 

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