Japan to increase science grants budget by ¥10 billion

The Japanese government has finalized a ¥247.9 billion budget for grants-in-aid for scientific research in fiscal 2026, an increase of about ¥10 billion from the previous year—the largest rise in the past decade. This move addresses concerns over declining research capabilities, with expansions in support for young researchers and international collaborations.

The Japanese government has settled on a ¥247.9 billion allocation for grants-in-aid for scientific research, known as kakenhi, in the fiscal 2026 budget. This represents an approximately ¥10 billion increase over the prior year's funding, the biggest jump in a decade. The program, managed by the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology, stands as Japan's primary competitive funding mechanism, spanning natural sciences, humanities, and social sciences—though its core budget had remained largely stagnant for years.

A key focus for the upcoming fiscal year is bolstering support for young researchers. In the 'Challenging research (exploratory)' category, which backs innovative and emerging projects, around 1,000 new slots dedicated to young investigators will be added, effectively doubling the number of grants. Each will offer up to ¥5 million.

To counter worries about the waning global standing of Japanese scientists, funding for international collaborative efforts will rise, along with higher acceptance rates for such proposals. Economic and academic groups have pushed for doubling the kakenhi overall. Last month, Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi directed ministers at the Council for Science, Technology and Innovation to ramp up investments in fundamental research substantially.

Additionally, on Wednesday, management expense grants for national universities—covering staff and research costs—were projected at ¥1.0971 trillion for fiscal 2026, up ¥18.8 billion from last year. This marks the largest increase on record, excluding fiscal 2014 when the Great East Japan Earthquake affected allocations.

These steps aim to rebuild and enhance Japan's research infrastructure amid competitive pressures.

संबंधित लेख

Japanese lawmakers in the Diet approving 8.56 trillion yen stopgap budget amid upper house delays, realistic news illustration.
AI द्वारा उत्पन्न छवि

Japan approves 8.56 trillion yen stopgap budget for fiscal 2026 amid upper house delays

AI द्वारा रिपोर्ट किया गया AI द्वारा उत्पन्न छवि

The Japanese government approved an 8.56 trillion yen stopgap budget on March 27 to fund operations for the first 11 days of fiscal 2026 starting April 1, due to stalled upper house deliberations on the main 122.31 trillion yen budget passed by the lower house earlier this month. This is the first such provisional measure in 11 years, backed by ruling and main opposition parties, and expected to pass parliament on March 30.

Japan's House of Representatives passed the fiscal 2026 budget proposal on March 14, supported by the ruling Liberal Democratic Party and Japan Innovation Party's majority, sending it to the House of Councillors. The budget totals a record 122.3 trillion yen, drawing criticism from opposition parties over the short deliberation time. The ruling coalition aims for passage by the fiscal year-end despite uncertainties in the upper house.

AI द्वारा रिपोर्ट किया गया

Defense Minister Shinjiro Koizumi said Friday that Japan's initial budget for defense spending and related costs in fiscal 2026 totals about 10.6 trillion yen ($66.5 billion), roughly 1.9 percent of its 2022 gross domestic product or around 1.5 percent using projected fiscal 2026 GDP. Japan aims to raise spending to 2 percent of GDP by fiscal 2027.

Sanae Takaichi is considering a new quota for growth investment covering 17 areas including artificial intelligence and semiconductors.

AI द्वारा रिपोर्ट किया गया

The Korean government plans to invest a combined 750 billion won ($502.8 million) over the next two years to commercialize artificial intelligence (AI)-enabled products, the finance ministry said on March 18. The plan was finalized at a meeting of economy-related ministers chaired by Finance Minister Koo Yun-cheol, as part of a blueprint for a 'super-innovation economy'.

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