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Japan’s LDP leadership contender Kishida vows to narrow income disparity

Japans LDP leadership contender Kishida vows to narrow income disparity
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Tokyo: Japan’s Former Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida vowed Wednesday September 8 to increase people’s income and narrow gaps through wealth redistribution in the post-pandemic era, announcing his economic policies for the presidential election of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP).

“The economic gap will widen further if we do the same things we have been doing,” Xinhua news agency quoted Kishida as saying.

He said that the deregulation and structural reforms promoted by Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga and his predecessor Shinzo Abe “undoubtedly yielded results.”

“Unless we properly distribute the fruits of growth, we cannot prevent disparities from widening,” Kishida said at a news conference in Tokyo, promising to fulfil the expansion of the middle class by providing support to those raising children.

Kishida also pledged to revitalise regional economies while rectifying excessive concentration of the population and industries in the Tokyo metropolitan area.

In order to achieve the country’s goal of net zero emissions by 2050, Kishida said Japan needs not only renewable energy, such as hydrogen and nuclear energy, but various options, and he also mentioned the need to maintain nuclear technology.

In late August, Kishida declared his bid for the leadership of the LDP on September 29, which will effectively determine the next prime minister as the LDP controls the powerful lower house of parliament.

As last week Suga suddenly announced that he intended to resign, the election is now projected to be contested between Kishida, former communications minister Sanae Takaichi and vaccine chief Taro Kono.

Takaichi formally announced her bid on Wednesday, while Kono is expected to do so later this week.

Meanwhile, four opposition parties including the main opposition Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan (CDPJ) reached an agreement on a set of corporate pledges on Wednesday, including lowering the consumption tax rate and achieving a zero-carbon society without nuclear energy.

The CDPJ and Reiwa Shinsengumi also vowed to lift the minimum wage.

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