Japan considering rolling out sales tax cut in April 2027, Mainichi reports

Japan considering rolling out sales tax cut in April 2027, Mainichi reports

TOKYO, June 2 (Reuters) – Japan is considering rolling out a two-year cut to an 8% ‌levy on food sales from April next year, ‌the Mainichi newspaper reported on Monday, citing an unnamed government executive.

The ​timeframe will allow Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s administration to promote the tax cut ahead of municipal elections slated for April 2027, the paper said.

The sales tax ‌rate is likely to ⁠be cut to 1% instead of the initially planned 0% to avoid the lengthy ⁠time needed to fix cash register systems to recognize a zero tax rate, the paper reported. The ​prime minister’s ​official residence was not ​immediately available to comment.

Japan ‌levies an 8% consumption tax on food and a 10% rate on other goods and services, key sources of funding for rising social welfare costs among a rapidly ageing population.

Takaichi pledged in January to scrap ‌the 8% levy on food ​sales for two years to ​help households weather the ​pain from rising living costs. Details ‌of the plan will be ​worked out in ​a meeting of ruling and opposition parties.

Her announcement on the tax cut caused a spike in ​bond yields ‌in January as investors saw the plan as ​worsening Japan’s already tattered finances.

(Reporting by Leika ​Kihara; Editing by Sam Holmes)

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