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Macau to give residents cash to battle inflation
Hong Kong (AFP) April 21, 2011 Macau will give all permanent residents a handout worth about $375 to address concerns that the city's poor are not benefiting from its booming gambling scene, the government said Thursday. Chief Executive Fernando Chui announced the cash giveaway -- 3,000 patacas ($375) for permanent residents and 1,800 for non-permanent residents -- as the city posted a 41.8 billion pataca budget surplus last year. Macau, the only city in China that allows casino gambling, has become the world's biggest gaming hub with $23.5 billion wagered at its tables last year. But there have been concerns about the growing income gap in the former Portuguese colony, despite the billions of dollars pouring into its gambling industry. It has a population of just over 550,000. The announcement comes after nearby Hong Kong announced a HK$6,000 ($770) cash handout to adult permanent residents and salary tax cuts following a huge fiscal surplus for the last financial year, which ended March 31. In a legislative session Wednesday, Chui told Macau lawmakers the cash is aimed at helping counter high inflation, a government spokeswoman confirmed Thursday. He said the decision to spend 1.7 billion patacas on the "wealth-sharing scheme" was made after taking into account the city's surging inflation and the government's large budget surplus. It is the fifth time the city has given cash handouts to residents since 2008, the spokeswoman said. Chui also announced the introduction of a special stamp duty to help curb property speculation. Properties bought and sold within a year of purchase will be subject to a 20 percent stamp duty, while properties sold between one to two years after purchase will face a 10 percent levy. Hong Kong introduced a similar stamp duty late last year to try to restrain runaway property prices in the densely populated former British colony, which is favoured by super-rich mainland Chinese investors.
earlier related report But massive government and business investment in reconstruction is expected to drive a sharp rebound in 2012, with the economy seen expanding 2.3 percent, up from the OECD's previous estimate of 1.3 percent given in a November report. "While it is still too early to assess the full extent of the damage, the immediate impact will be to reduce output, although this will later be reversed by reconstruction efforts," the Paris-based OECD said. The monster March 11 quake and tsunami struck just as Japan appeared to be back on track following a slowdown in the latter part of last year, the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development said in its 2011 Japan economic survey. "The immediate impact of the horrendous disaster is likely to be large, extending beyond the areas devastated by the earthquake and tsunami," it said. "Indeed, damage to factories in the Tohoku region has disrupted the supply chains of key industrial products even beyond Japan, notably in the automobile sector." The quake and tsunami hit facilities of many vehicle component firms and damage to nuclear power plants has resulted in severe power shortages, which have forced companies to scale back production. But as devastating as the disaster was, the OECD said its short-term impact on the Japanese economy was likely to be far less than that of the collapse of Wall Street giant Lehman Brothers at the beginning of the global financial crisis. The damage "is projected to significantly reduce output in the second quarter of 2011, although it is likely to be relatively mild compared to the 20 percent drop following the 2008 Lehman shock," the OECD said. Experience from previous disasters suggested that the short-term negative impact would be followed by a rebound fuelled by government spending, firms replacing and repairing equipment and rebuilding houses. "Such a pattern is projected to slow real GDP growth to 0.8 percent in 2011, followed by a pick-up to 2.3 percent growth in 2012," it said. Japan has said the cost of rebuilding could be as much as 25 trillion yen ($303 billion). "We are absolutely confident that Japan will overcome this problem, we in fact have been saying that we believe Japan will have a limited economic impact," from the disaster, OECD secretary general Angel Gurria said at a news conference. The OECD however warned that deflation was likely to remain a problem. Japan has long been fighting a losing battle against falling consumer prices, recording a 24th straight month of deflation in February. "Deflationary pressures are likely to remain a headwind to growth," it said. "The Bank of Japan should thus maintain an accommodative stance until deflation is overcome, paying attention to downside risks." Deflation prompts consumers to defer purchases, clouding the outlook for corporate investment and creating a drag on growth. Japanese shoppers have also been cutting back on non-essential spending in the wake of the disaster, which devastated swathes of the northeast and left more than 27,000 dead or missing. "In contrast to fixed investment, private consumption is projected to remain relatively subdued during 2011, reflecting weaker household confidence ... and the impact of measures to finance reconstruction spending without increasing government borrowing," the OECD said. The International Monetary Fund earlier this month cut its 2011 growth forecast for Japan to 1.4 percent, compared with 1.6 percent before the quake. Japan recorded gross domestic product growth of 3.9 percent last year as the economy rebounded from a fall of 6.3 percent in 2009 amid the international financial crisis.
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