November 24, 2024
Japan votes, election expected to punish PM’s coalition #JapanFinance

Japan votes, election expected to punish PM’s coalition #JapanFinance

CashNews.co

Japan’s voters will decide the fate of Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba’s government in an election expected to punish his coalition over a funding scandal and inflation, potentially ending a decade of dominance for his Liberal Democratic Party.

The LDP and its longtime partner Komeito will suffer a drubbing from voters on Sunday, with the coalition possibly losing its parliamentary majority, opinion polls suggest, as Japan struggles with rising costs of living and increasingly tense relations with neighbouring China.

Losing the majority in the lower house would force Ishiba, in office just a month, into power-sharing negotiations with smaller parties, bringing uncertainty in some policy areas, although no polls forecast the LDP being ejected from power.

the first voter at a polling station
Almost 40 per cent of voters say their top concern is the economy and cost of living. (AP PHOTO)

Political wrangling could roil markets and be a headache for the Bank of Japan, if Ishiba chooses a partner that favours maintaining near-zero interest rates when the central bank wants to gradually raise them.

“He’ll be considerably weakened as a leader, his party will be weakened in the policies that it particularly wants to focus on, because bringing in a coalition partner will cause them to have to make certain compromises with that party, whatever party it may be,” said Jeffrey Hall, an expert on Japanese politics at the Kanda University of International Studies.

The LDP could lose as many as 50 of its 247 seats in the lower house and Komeito could slip below 30, giving the coalition fewer than the 233 needed for a majority, a survey by the Asahi newspaper suggested last week.

“That’s basically the scenario for ‘sell Japan’,” as investors ponder how the outcome could affect fiscal and monetary policy, said Naka Matsuzawa, chief macro strategist at Nomura Securities. Japanese shares fell 2.7 per cent last week on the benchmark Nikkei index.

The LDP will remain easily the biggest force in parliament, polls indicate, but it could lose many votes to the number two party, the opposition Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan, which toppled the LDP in 2009, the Asahi said, estimating he CDPJ could win as many as 140 seats.

Nine days before US voters choose a new president, Japan’s general election appears likely to show Ishiba miscalculated in going to the voters for a verdict on the LDP’s scandal over unrecorded donations at fundraisers.

After purging some LDP members, Ishiba says he considers the case closed and has not ruled out giving government posts to disgraced politicians, possibly angering voters, experts say.