Japan to declare Covid-19 emergency for Tokyo region after record daily infections
The declaration will cover the capital and the surrounding prefectures of Kanagawa, Saitama and Chiba, and is likely to be imposed from Friday until Feb. 7, Economy Minister Yasutoshi Nishimura said. It will be revoked when infections fall below levels laid out by the government, he added.
Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga is set to declare a state of emergency Thursday for Tokyo and adjacent areas, trying to stem Covid-19 infections that hit a daily record in the capital.
The declaration will cover the capital and the surrounding prefectures of Kanagawa, Saitama and Chiba, and is likely to be imposed from Friday until Feb. 7, Economy Minister Yasutoshi Nishimura said. It will be revoked when infections fall below levels laid out by the government, he added.
Suga is set to hold a news conference at 6 p.m. to discuss the matter. Tokyo found more than 2,000 cases of coronavirus Thursday, a record, broadcaster NHK reported, citing an unidentified official.
Japan’s emergency doesn’t imply the kind of lockdowns seen in some parts of Europe, and the government is seeking far less stringent measures than under its previous emergency last year, which triggered the worst economic contraction on record.
Residents will be asked to avoid going out only after 8 p.m. and bars and restaurants will be instructed to close at that time. Authorities can’t enforce compliance for now, though Suga is seeking to amend the law to add penalties for businesses that don’t abide by government measures, and formalize incentives for those that do.
Bloomberg Economics’ Yuki Masujima sees the emergency declaration shaving up to 0.7% off the economy for each month it lasts. Tokyo and neighboring areas account for about one-third of the country’s gross domestic product.
Ballooning infections have been a blow for Suga, who had sought to restore growth despite the pandemic, including by offering domestic travel incentives to bolster the tourism industry. His public support has slumped, with polls showing most voters favor tougher pandemic measures.
“This increases the possibility of an economic contraction,” economist Yoshimasa Maruyama at SMBC Nikko Securities said of the emergency. “Suga wanted to wait until after the New Year’s holiday to make the declaration and that has put him behind the curve to limit the spread of the virus.”
Even before Suga first hinted he would declare an emergency, the economic recovery was forecast to slow in the first three months of 2021, with companies scaling back investment and households opting to save more.
The restrictions on activities are likely to hamper the effectiveness of the economic stimulus package Suga put together last month, which is to be funded by an extra budget. The package is no longer suitable in the current environment, Nomura Research Institute economist Takahide Kiuchi said in a research note.“The government should change the content of the third extra budget and change the course of economic policy in order to strengthen support for companies and individuals,” Kiuchi said.
The emergency declaration decision will be formally announced after a day of consultations with advisers and reports to parliamentary committees. An advisory panel on the pandemic on Thursday approved the emergency proposal, Nishimura said.
It will be the second in Japan after a declaration that began in April, but is not expected to cause as much pain as the first, when the virus slammed the brakes on the economy and sent it into its worst downturn.
Suga’s signature “Go To” travel campaign, which had already been suspended through Jan. 11, is unlikely to be revived while the state of emergency is in place. The government will press for a return to remote work, aiming to cut the number of commuters in the region by 70%, Nishimura said. Schools, however, will not be asked to close and university entrance exams will go ahead as scheduled.
Japan has had by far the lowest infections of any Group of Seven nation, recording fewer cases in the past year than the US has seen in recent days.