Politics


TOE Alert: Election Likely to Buttress Abe - for a while

Abe likely to gain clout from elections--temporarily.

TOE Alert: Abe Almost Certain to Call Snap Election, Delay Second Tax Hike

Abe almost certain to call snap election for Lower House and delay hike in the consumption tax.

TOE Alert: Abe approval down again, so are real wages, TPP delayed, BOJ infighting, etc.

Abe’s approval ratings fell again; in the NHK poll, approval was down to 44% while disapproval was up to 38%.

GOP Wave Shakes Up Politics But Should Have Little Economic Impact

FMI’s commentary on the top ten takeaways from midterm elections.

BOJ Doubles down to Save Credibility, Part 2

Kuroda’s actions may have been triggered by a draft report by the BOJ staff reportedly projecting a large downward revision in expected inflation in fiscal 2015; in the end the BOJ made a small downward revision.

BOJ Doubles down to Save Credibility, Part 1

In the face of growing loss of faith in the Bank of Japan’s ability to either achieve its 2% inflation target in the foreseeable future or to help boost real growth, Kuroda doubled down his strategy of lots of confident talk and even more money-creation.

Abe Poll Ratings Resume Plunge, Part 4

Abe's falling approval ratings and the TPP stalemate.

Abe Poll Ratings Resume Plunge, Part 3

Abe’s falling approval ratings make him even more cautious on restarting the nuclear power plants in the face of the two-thirds of the public that opposes restarts,

Abe Poll Ratings Resume Plunge, Part 2

As we detailed in yesterday’s Alert, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s approval ratings have resume the steady slide that was temporarily interrupted by the Cabinet reshuffle in September. We suspect that his support remains “a mile wide and an inch deep.” If there were a solid alternative, either inside the LDP or from the opposition parties, we suspect his approval ratings would be even lower.

Abe Poll Ratings Resume Plunge, Part 1

After a very short-lived bounce in his approval ratings from the Cabinet reshuffle in September, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has suffered an equally quick tumble back to the pre-shuffle lows.

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