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PM Kishida's decision to raise the defence budget comes at a high price, literally: to finance the boost of the country's military spending to about 43 trillion JPY (USD 318 billion) for fiscal 2023 to fiscal 2027, an increase of over 50% from its current five-year spending plan, he suggested increasing the corporate tax, the tobacco tax, decreasing tax-free investment, taxing the wealthy and even dipping into the Tohoku Recovery Fund. Now members of his cabinet take to the barricades: one of his most hawkish ministers, Minister of Economic Security Takaichi Sanae, said she could not understand Kishida's intentions in making comments at this point that discourage wage growth.
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asia.nikkei.com
I'm all for taxing the rich and the smokers, but why touch the funds allocated to the reconstruction of Tohoku?
The Tohoku Recovery Fund is a special tax designed to finance reconstruction costs for areas affected by the March 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake. This special income tax for reconstruction adds a 2.1% levy to individual income tax through 2037, generating about 400 billion JPY (USD 2.9 billion) in revenue for the government each year.
mainichi.jp
mainichi.jp
Comments like these underscore the difficulty Kishida has had keeping his Liberal Democratic Party in line since the death of former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe in July left its largest faction without a clear leader to work with on policy matters. The conflict over funding risks bogging down the more fundamental debate over what types of capabilities Japan needs to counter the Chinese threat. Takaichi said that she had discussed the issue with Kishida on Monday and that both agreed a stable funding source was needed. She argued that the problem was timing: The government should wait and see how next spring's annual wage negotiations turn out before talking about a tax hike.
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Japan PM faces cabinet rebellion over tax hikes for defense
'If I'm dismissed, so be it,' economic security minister says after dissenting tweets

I'm all for taxing the rich and the smokers, but why touch the funds allocated to the reconstruction of Tohoku?
The Tohoku Recovery Fund is a special tax designed to finance reconstruction costs for areas affected by the March 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake. This special income tax for reconstruction adds a 2.1% levy to individual income tax through 2037, generating about 400 billion JPY (USD 2.9 billion) in revenue for the government each year.

Japan gov't mulls tapping disaster recovery taxes to cover rising defense spending - The Mainichi
TOKYO -- To cover Japan's growing defense spending, the government and ruling parties are considering using a portion of the

Japan plans to extend quake recovery tax to cover defense spending - The Mainichi
TOKYO (Kyodo) -- The Japanese government on Wednesday proposed a plan to prolong a temporary tax implemented to pay for the 2011 quake and tsunami rec