The Democratic Party for the People has agreed to begin discussions with the ruling party on the “1.06 million yen barrier” and “1.3 million yen barrier” that would result in social insurance premiums, and discussions may begin as early as next week.
The secretaries-general and Diet affairs committee chairs of the Komeito and Democratic Party for the People met in the Diet on the 1st and agreed to begin discussions on policies such as tax cuts aimed at increasing take-home pay, as advocated by the people. The LDP and the People’s Party have also agreed to begin discussions, and concrete discussions are expected to begin as early as next week between the ruling LDP, Komeito and the People’s Party. Komeito also expressed its intention to review the issues of the “1.06 million yen wall” and the “1.3 million yen wall,” which require people to join the Employee’s Pension Insurance and incur social insurance premiums, and the public responded. For details, see source 2024/11/1 20:08 Nikkei Visual Data Previous thread.
Yuichiro Tamaki (Representative of the Democratic Party for the People) @tamakiyuichiro It’s been clear from the start that it favors high-income earners. That’s no reason not to do it though. We should discuss whether or not to differentiate the basic deduction amount based on income brackets, as is currently the case. 12:30 AM · October 31, 2024 · 5.368 million views https
Yoshiko Sakurai @yoshikosakurai The Democratic Party for the People is working hard to increase everyone’s take-home pay But Chief Cabinet Secretary Hayashi of the Ishiba administration seems to be against it I think the Democratic Party for the People’s policy is correct We need tax cut policies now more than ever to increase everyone’s take-home pay 7:45 PM · November 1, 2024 · 853K views.
Either Tamakin will succumb to the Ministry of Finance and become a figurehead prime minister, or the Ministry of Finance will work to bring the LDP and the Constitutional Democratic Party into a grand coalition and bring back Yoshihiko Noda, the figurehead prime minister of the Ministry of Finance. The lost 50 years are certain, so we can all say thank you for your hard work lol.
>>15 That will be after the House of Councillors election lol The trend is to avoid forming a coalition until next year’s House of Councillors election lol.
>>22 We couldn’t get to the “resolution” stage unless we “confronted” and reduced the number of seats held by the LDP and Komeito until they fell below the majority.
The working generation who voted for the Constitutional Democratic Party as a punishment “I should have voted for the Democratic Party for the People” “I voted for the Constitutional Democratic Party, so now I can’t get through this issue and it’s troubling me” (´・ω・`).
Tamaki: “Reconsider the 1.3 million yen barrier!” ↓ LDP: “It’s impossible because tax revenues will decrease.” Tamaki: “Then we’ll withdraw from the coalition.” LDP: “…Let’s do it.” Tamaki: “Relax dismissal regulations!” LDP: “It’s impossible because the working generation will oppose it.” Tamaki: “Cut social security costs!” LDP: “It’s impossible because the elderly will oppose it.” The rest is omitted.
>>32 If we go by Western theory, the SPP will likely surge in the next election. The only purely conservative and anti-globalization party is the SPP. Unfortunately, the Japan Conservative Party is the successor to the Restoration Party.
Meanwhile, the Constitutional Democratic Party, which has little presence, plans to put all its efforts into political and parliamentary reforms that have no bearing on the lives of the people.
The economy won’t recover if we just hand out temporary subsidies to low-income earners, and on the contrary, it will only discourage the working generation. If it’s okay to work a little more, it would be healthier to work and buy the things you like.
No financial resources (current national debt is 1,311 trillion yen, 40 trillion yen deficit last year)
Higher income earners benefit (younger and weaker people lose, further widening gap) Future tax hikes are inevitable (younger people lose) It’s so huge that it will be impossible to provide grants, free tuition, school lunches, scholarships, and other economic measures How can you support young people? It’s the other way around, there’s no way this is possible, are you stupid?
Comments