fiscal New Report Details Rising Fiscal and Other Costs Associated with Missouri Development Trends By webfeeds.brookings.edu Published On :: Mon, 09 Dec 2002 00:00:00 -0500 Missouri's population is spreading out, adding to the costs of providing services and infrastructure across the state, according to a new study released today by the Brookings Institution Center on Urban and Metropolitan Policy.The 84-page study, Growth in the Heartland: Challenges and Opportunities for Missouri, reports that Missouri's population is quickly dispersing, with smaller metropolitan areas experiencing some of the state's fastest growth and residency in unincorporated areas on the rise. Though new residents and jobs fueled prosperity in the 1990s, the report finds that growth has slowed in the past year, and suggests that the state's highly decentralized development patterns could become troublesome as Missouri contends with a slowing economy and serious budget deficits.Sponsored by the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, Growth in the Heartland provides the most comprehensive and up-to-date body of research and statistics yet assembled analyzing the direction, scope, and implications of development in Missouri. In addition to assessing the consequences of those trends for the state's fiscal health, economic competitiveness, and quality of life, the report addresses the potential role of state and local policy in shaping those trends in the future. Specific findings of the report conclude that: Growth in the Columbia, Springfield, Joplin, and St. Joseph metropolitan areas strongly outpaced that of the Kansas City and St. Louis metropolitan areas in the 1990s. Altogether the four smaller areas captured fully one-quarter of the state's growth and doubled the growth rate of the Kansas City and St. Louis areas. Population and job growth also moved beyond the smaller metro areas and towns into the state's vast unincorporated areas. Overall, residency in these often-outlying areas grew by 12.3 percent in the 1990sa rate 50 percent faster than the 8.1 percent growth of towns and cities. Most rural counties reversed decades of decline in the 1990s, with eight in ten rural counties experiencing population growth and nine in ten adding new jobs. By 2000, more rural citizens lived outside of cities and towns than in them, as more than 70 percent of new growth occurred in unincorporated areas. "Missouri experienced tremendous gains during the last decade, but the decentralized nature of growth across the state poses significant fiscal challenges for the future," said Bruce Katz, vice president of Brookings and director of the policy center. "The challenge for Missouri is to give communities the tools, incentives, and opportunities to grow in more efficient and fiscally responsible ways."The Brookings Institution Center on Urban and Metropolitan Policy is committed to shaping a new generation of policies that will help build strong neighborhoods, cities, and metropolitan regions. By informing the deliberations of state and federal policymakers with expert knowledge and practical experience, the center promotes integrated approaches and practical solutions to the challenges confronting metropolitan communities. Learn more at www.brookings.edu/urban. Full Article
fiscal On Ferguson, fragmentation, and fiscal disparities By webfeeds.brookings.edu Published On :: Thu, 02 Apr 2015 14:34:00 -0400 Municipal elections in Ferguson, Mo. are fast approaching. Amid the backdrop of the US Department of Justice identifying systemic racial bias by law enforcement and an over-reliance on traffic fines and court fees for revenue, there are great challenges to overcome. It would be one thing if Ferguson was unique. It is not. Ferguson (containing just over 21,000 people) is one of 91 jurisdictions in St. Louis County, each with its own governments to run, services to provide, and budgets to balance. This kind of governmental fragmentation, a product of state law, is repeated in many metropolitan areas across the country. Suburban fragmentation makes providing public services inefficient; complicates regional planning; and, according to a recent OECD report diminishes economic growth, productivity, and social mobility. The problems wrought by fragmentation have only been compounded in recent years by rapid economic and demographic changes. In the 2000s, suburbs in the nation’s largest metro areas became home to more poor residents and more African Americans than cities for the first time. Since 2000, the number of high-poverty neighborhoods (with poverty rates above 20 percent) more than doubled in the suburbs, while the number of majority-minority neighborhoods grew by almost half. Many suburban communities dealing with rising poverty and new populations are ill-equipped to address growing and changing needs. That’s particularly true in places like Ferguson, where population and jobs have declined over the years. According to new Brookings research, residents of Ferguson lived near 14 percent fewer jobs in 2012 than they did in 2000. The resulting strains on local tax bases amount to one reason that local governments throughout the St. Louis region came to rely heavily on revenue-raising tactics like traffic fines and court fees. Part of the mandate of the Ferguson Commission convened by Missouri Governor Nixon is to address the issue of governance, which will require confronting the region’s fragmented landscape. The commission can learn from states that have encouraged the sharing of services across municipalities or regions that are pursuing more collaborative approaches to respond to shared challenges around issues like housing, transportation, or community development. But while these strategies can reduce the typically competitive approaches employed by neighboring suburbs, they still come up against deeper structural limitations that collaboration alone cannot overcome. The commission should consider a bolder response to the region’s fragmentation and fiscal challenges. One model the commission can learn from is Minneapolis-St. Paul’s regional revenue sharing structure. Established in 1971 by the Minnesota Fiscal Disparities Act, Minneapolis-St. Paul’s regional tax base sharing mechanism gives residents access to adequate resources for local services like public safety, irrespective of where they live. According to a study by Myron Orfield and Nicolas Wallace, the law has dramatically reduced tax disparities between high and low-income areas, allowing for reinvestment in the central cities and in fiscally challenged communities. And it has reduced the incentive for municipalities to “steal” revenue-generating land uses from neighbors (very frequently a waste of taxpayer dollars), promoting more integrated regional economic development. The model works by mandating that each municipality within the designated seven-county area contribute 40 percent of its annual growth in commercial-industrial tax revenues to a regional pool. These resources are then redistributed to the participating municipalities based on local capacity. The mechanism helps equalize local available resources, filling local budget gaps where they exist, without undermining local autonomy. For the vast majority of communities, the sharing program has meant lower taxes and better services. A 2012 study concluded that without the program, nearly 80 percent of the region’s 186 municipalities would have to raise taxes to maintain their current level of services. Revenue sharing has enabled the cities of Minneapolis and St. Paul to invest in higher quality public services like policing and education over the decades since the law was enacted. Many older suburbs bear less of the public burden for repairing old infrastructure, renewing public facilities, cleaning up brownfields, upgrading neighborhood housing, or dealing with abandoned properties. Even many developing bedroom suburbs have benefited from revenue sharing since these places often lack a strong commercial tax base, leading to shortages in infrastructure or education funding. These results indicate that regional revenue sharing can enable at-risk suburbs like Ferguson to pay for basic services like public safety without relying excessively on fining their small citizenries. The path to creating revenue sharing programs in our metropolitan areas runs through state legislatures. The Minnesota law was passed in the 1970s with “a unique coalition of central-city and suburban legislators working together to ensure the future economic vitality of the entire state.” The same case should be made today in Missouri to rural, urban, and suburban representatives alike. With better services and lower taxes for the vast majority of municipalities, the political math adds up. As Orfield and Wallace put it, regions facing growing economic, social, and fiscal disparities have a choice: “allow the disparity to deepen or work to find solutions that can benefit all.” If we are serious about fixing Ferguson and other places like it, states across the country, starting with Missouri, must address the structural governance and fiscal flaws that lie at the heart of the matter. Authors Bruce KatzElizabeth Kneebone Image Source: © Kate Munsch / Reuters Full Article
fiscal ‘India needs an immediate fiscal stimulus of around 5%’ By webfeeds.brookings.edu Published On :: Sun, 03 May 2020 21:47:10 +0000 Full Article
fiscal @ Brookings Podcast: Combine Going Over the Fiscal Cliff with a Stimulus By webfeeds.brookings.edu Published On :: Fri, 27 Jul 2012 00:00:00 -0400 While falling off the "fiscal cliff" (of automatic spending cuts and tax increases if Congress fails to act) could hurt the economy, expert William Gale says the actual result, if coupled with a temporary economic stimulus, would be greater incentives to make a better long-term budget deal. Video William Gale: Combine Going Over the Fiscal Cliff with a Stimulus Authors William G. Gale Full Article
fiscal Donald Trump’s fiscal package promises to promote expansion By webfeeds.brookings.edu Published On :: Tue, 13 Dec 2016 17:32:25 +0000 One month after the election, a huge market rally shows stock-market investors like the changes Donald Trump will bring to the business world. At the same time, great uncertainty remains about the new Administration's policies toward the Middle East, Russia, trade relations, and other matters of state and defense. But on the core issues of… Full Article
fiscal To Fathom the Fiscal Fix, Look in the Mirror By webfeeds.brookings.edu Published On :: Mon, 30 Nov -0001 00:00:00 +0000 Pietro Nivola examines the recent fiscal cliff agreement, arguing that despite the criticism it received from both sides of the political spectrum, its provisions reflect what the majority of Americans want. Full Article Uncategorized
fiscal Hutchins Center Fiscal Impact Measure By webfeeds.brookings.edu Published On :: Wed, 29 Apr 2020 14:00:15 +0000 The Hutchins Center Fiscal Impact Measure shows how much local, state, and federal tax and spending policy adds to or subtracts from overall economic growth, and provides a near-term forecast of fiscal policies’ effects on economic activity. Editor’s Note: Due to significant uncertainty about the effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on the outlook for GDP… Full Article
fiscal The risk of fiscal collapse in coal-reliant communities By webfeeds.brookings.edu Published On :: EXECUTIVE SUMMARY If the United States undertakes actions to address the risks of climate change, the use of coal in the power sector will decline rapidly. This presents major risks to the 53,000 US workers employed by the industry and their communities. 26 US counties are classified as “coal-mining dependent,” meaning the coal industry is… Full Article
fiscal Columbia Energy Exchange: Coal communities face risk of fiscal collapse By webfeeds.brookings.edu Published On :: Mon, 15 Jul 2019 15:31:47 +0000 Full Article
fiscal The risk of fiscal collapse in coal-reliant communities By webfeeds.brookings.edu Published On :: Wed, 17 Jul 2019 20:46:52 +0000 Full Article
fiscal Why local governments should prepare for the fiscal effects of a dwindling coal industry By webfeeds.brookings.edu Published On :: Thu, 05 Sep 2019 15:36:41 +0000 Full Article
fiscal ‘India needs an immediate fiscal stimulus of around 5%’ By webfeeds.brookings.edu Published On :: Sun, 03 May 2020 21:47:10 +0000 Full Article
fiscal Is India getting right mix of fiscal & monetary policy? By webfeeds.brookings.edu Published On :: Sun, 03 May 2020 21:51:29 +0000 Full Article
fiscal Eurozone desperately needs a fiscal transfer mechanism to soften the effects of competitiveness imbalances By webfeeds.brookings.edu Published On :: Thu, 18 Jun 2015 00:00:00 -0400 The eurozone has three problems: national debt obligations that cannot be met, medium-term imbalances in trade competitiveness, and long-term structural flaws. The short-run problem requires more of the monetary easing that Germany has, with appalling shortsightedness, been resisting, and less of the near-term fiscal restraint that Germany has, with equally appalling shortsightedness, been seeking. To insist that Greece meet all of its near-term current debt service obligations makes about as much sense as did French and British insistence that Germany honor its reparations obligations after World War I. The latter could not be and were not honored. The former cannot and will not be honored either. The medium-term problem is that, given a single currency, labor costs are too high in Greece and too low in Germany and some other northern European countries. Because adjustments in currency values cannot correct these imbalances, differences in growth of wages must do the job—either wage deflation and continued depression in Greece and other peripheral countries, wage inflation in Germany, or both. The former is a recipe for intense and sustained misery. The latter, however politically improbable it may now seem, is the better alternative. The long-term problem is that the eurozone lacks the fiscal transfer mechanisms necessary to soften the effects of competitiveness imbalances while other forms of adjustment take effect. This lack places extraordinary demands on the willingness of individual nations to undertake internal policies to reduce such imbalances. Until such fiscal transfer mechanisms are created, crises such as the current one are bound to recur. Present circumstances call for a combination of short-term expansionary policies that have to be led or accepted by the surplus nations, notably Germany, who will also have to recognize and accept that not all Greek debts will be paid or that debt service payments will not be made on time and at originally negotiated interest rates. The price for those concessions will be a current and credible commitment eventually to restore and maintain fiscal balance by the peripheral countries, notably Greece. Authors Henry J. Aaron Publication: The International Economy Image Source: © Vincent Kessler / Reuters Full Article
fiscal Federal fiscal aid to cities and states must be massive and immediate By webfeeds.brookings.edu Published On :: Tue, 24 Mar 2020 13:39:35 +0000 And why “relief” and “bailout” are two very different things There is a glaring shortfall in the ongoing negotiations between Congress and the White House to design the next emergency relief package to stave off a coronavirus-triggered economic crisis: Relief to close the massive resource gap confronting state and local governments as they tackle safety… Full Article
fiscal Australian economy is starting its recovery phase, fiscal policy will influence it the most: NAB By www.cnbc.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 01:11:04 GMT Australia has started plans on re-opening its economy after a period of social distancing. Ivan Colhoun of the National Australian Bank suggests looking to fiscal stimulus to cushion the hit to their economy, and to keep an eye on how lower immigration may slow the economy in the long term. Full Article
fiscal Fiscal stimulus talk is the main mover of the market By www.cnbc.com Published On :: Tue, 10 Mar 2020 21:26:42 GMT Stocks moved higher on Tuesday as investors bet on fiscal stimulus to ease the coronavirus crisis. Full Article
fiscal Greece's strict fiscal targets will likely be relaxed in 2021 as well, minister says By www.cnbc.com Published On :: Wed, 06 May 2020 12:27:08 GMT Greece might be spared from having to hit strict fiscal targets related to previous bailouts next year, a government official told CNBC, given the ongoing health and economic crises. Full Article
fiscal Postal Service sees fiscal second quarter revenue gain and further net losses By www.logisticsmgmt.com Published On :: 2020-05-08T15:51:00+00:00 Quarterly revenue—at $17.8 billion—headed up $348 million on an annual basis. But, despite the revenue gain, volume declined, falling 2.3% to 34,013 total pieces, and total operating expenses—at $22.3 billion—were up$2.8 billion, or 14.2%. Full Article
fiscal Nintendo Sees 7.4% Increase in Sales in Fiscal Year 2020, Sells 55.77 Million Switch Units Worldwide By www.animenewsnetwork.com Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 12:00:00 -0400 Animal Crossing: New Horizons sells 11.77 million units in 1st 11 days for "best start ever" Full Article Games COVID-19
fiscal Tax-News.com: Netherlands Announces 2019 Fiscal Agenda By www.tax-news.com Published On :: Fri, 31 May 2019 00:00:00 GMT On May 28, 2019, Dutch State Secretary for Finance Menno Snel issued an update on the Government's 2019 fiscal agenda, which includes an outline of tax legislative proposals that the Government intends to submit to parliament in the remainder of the year. Full Article
fiscal The equity implications of fiscal consolidation By www.oecd.org Published On :: Wed, 16 Jan 2013 14:47:00 GMT In several OECD countries, ongoing fiscal consolidation might have a negative impact on the static income distribution. However, this conclusion should be treated only as an approximate first step in the analysis. Full Article
fiscal Measuring Fiscal Decentralisation, Concepts and Policies By www.oecd.org Published On :: Fri, 22 Feb 2013 12:32:00 GMT This book deals with two issues. The first concerns the various measurement of fiscal decentralization in general and their usefulness for policy analysis. The second and more specific issue concerns the taxonomy of intergovernmental grants and the limits of the current classifications. Full Article
fiscal Fiscal and Taxation Reforms for a More Inclusive Growth in China By www.oecd.org Published On :: Sun, 24 Mar 2013 10:18:00 GMT The fiscal and taxation reforms will be more than ever necessary in China to ensure that growth becomes more inclusive. So far, China has had a major success in reducing the poverty. But additional tax reforms will be needed to reduce further inequality in disposable income and across regions, as well as to help reduce the rural-urban divide. Full Article
fiscal Choosing fiscal consolidation instruments compatible with growth and equity By www.oecd.org Published On :: Tue, 02 Jul 2013 17:15:00 GMT This study proposes a structured approach to selecting instruments of fiscal consolidation that are consistent with growth, equity and global-rebalancing objectives, which is then illustrated with a particular application. Full Article
fiscal Ireland's Carbon Tax and the Fiscal Crisis - Environment Working Paper No. 59 By dx.doi.org Published On :: Thu, 03 Oct 2013 14:24:00 GMT This paper describes the features of the tax, recounts the story of its interplay between fiscal adjustment and helping meet the obligations to raise taxes, and implications for competitiveness and carbon leakage, environmental effectiveness and equity issues, and draws conclusions regarding why it happened, and provides tentative insights for other countries in a similar situation. Full Article
fiscal Making fiscal decentralisation work By www.oecd.org Published On :: Mon, 02 Dec 2013 10:00:00 GMT Hundreds of thousands of elected sub-national governments worldwide provide services and levy taxes on residents and companies. Full Article
fiscal Fiscal decentralisation: lessons from around the world By www.itdweb.org Published On :: Tue, 03 Dec 2013 13:30:00 GMT Senior tax policymakers and administrators from across the world are meeting this week in Marrakech to discuss how powers to set and collect taxes should be allocated across different levels of government to ensure accountability, efficiency and economic stability. Full Article
fiscal Personal tax treatment of company cars and commuting expenses: Estimating the fiscal and environmental costs By dx.doi.org Published On :: Tue, 15 Jul 2014 07:48:00 GMT Company cars form a large proportion of the car fleet in many OECD countries and are also influential in determining the composition of the wider vehicle fleet. When employees provided with a company car use that car for personal purposes, personal income tax rules value the benefit in a number of different ways. Full Article
fiscal Fiscal Federalism - Sub-central Tax Autonomy By dx.doi.org Published On :: Thu, 12 Mar 2015 17:30:00 GMT This paper provides an update of the indicators that measure the tax autonomy of sub-central governments in OECD countries. Over the last decade, tax autonomy at the state level increased, while it hardly changed at the local level. The OECD now has tax autonomy indicators for the years 1995, 2002, 2005, 2008 and 2011. Full Article
fiscal Governments should target prudent debt levels and fiscal rules will help get there By www.oecd.org Published On :: Fri, 03 Jul 2015 15:00:00 GMT Governments should set prudent debt targets to ensure that public finances serve to promote economic growth and stability, according to new OECD research. Full Article
fiscal Press events during OECD Committee on Fiscal Affairs, on 30 June – 1 July in Kyoto, Japan By www.oecd.org Published On :: Fri, 24 Jun 2016 10:05:00 GMT Representatives of countries and jurisdictions worldwide will gather in Kyoto, Japan on 30 June and 1 July for a special meeting of the OECD Committee on Fiscal Affairs organised to take forward the OECD/G20 Base Erosion and Profit Shifting (BEPS) Project. Full Article
fiscal Fiscal incentives for R&D and innovation in a diverse world By www.oecd-ilibrary.org Published On :: Tue, 13 Sep 2016 15:40:00 GMT Fiscal incentives, including tax policies, should be directed at specific barriers, impediments or synergies to facilitate the desired level of investment in R&D and innovations. Without careful design, policies can have unintended consequences such as favouring incumbent firms, encouraging small firms to undertake less efficient activities, or creating arbitrage and rent-seeking activity. Full Article
fiscal Does Fiscal Decentralisation Foster Regional Convergence? By www.oecd.org Published On :: Fri, 23 Sep 2016 06:16:00 GMT Across the OECD, GDP per capita is converging. In contrast, regional disparities – or differences in GDP per capita across jurisdictions – are rising, mainly as a result of widening productivity differences. Fiscal decentralisation could help reduce them again. According to new OECD research, assigning more ownsource revenue to sub-national governments dampens regional GDP disparities and underpins regional convergence. Full Article
fiscal Using the fiscal levers to escape the low-growth trap By www.oecd.org Published On :: Thu, 24 Nov 2016 00:49:00 GMT Using fiscal levers to escape the low-growth trap Full Article
fiscal Fiscal Federalism Network - News & Events By www.oecd.org Published On :: Wed, 04 Apr 2018 09:20:00 GMT The OECD Network on Fiscal Relations across Levels of Government provides analysis and statistical underpinnings on the relationship between central and subcentral government, and its impact on efficiency, equity and macroeconomic stability. Full Article
fiscal Tax and fiscal policy should continue to support households and businesses through containment, then shift to bolstering recovery By www.oecd.org Published On :: Wed, 15 Apr 2020 12:00:00 GMT Tax and fiscal policy responses are playing a critical role in limiting the hardship caused by containment measures, and should continue to do so as governments seek to support households and businesses, protect employment and pursue economic recovery from the global pandemic, according to new OECD analysis. Full Article
fiscal Tax and fiscal policies central to governments’ responses to Covid-19 crisis By www.oecd.org Published On :: Mon, 04 May 2020 12:10:00 GMT With global economic activity facing a historic drop and government spending rising dramatically, the implications of the Covid-19 crisis on public finances and tax revenues are significant. Full Article
fiscal Fiscal incentives for R&D and innovation in a diverse world By dx.doi.org Published On :: Thu, 09 Jun 2016 12:02:00 GMT Public policy has an important role to play in promoting research and development (R&D) and the development, diffusion, and use of new knowledge and innovations. Fiscal incentives, including tax policies, should be directed at specific barriers, impediments or synergies to facilitate the desired level of investment in R&D and innovations. Full Article
fiscal The equity implications of fiscal consolidation By www.oecd.org Published On :: Wed, 16 Jan 2013 14:47:00 GMT In several OECD countries, ongoing fiscal consolidation might have a negative impact on the static income distribution. However, this conclusion should be treated only as an approximate first step in the analysis. Full Article
fiscal Measuring Fiscal Decentralisation, Concepts and Policies By www.oecd.org Published On :: Fri, 22 Feb 2013 12:32:00 GMT This book deals with two issues. The first concerns the various measurement of fiscal decentralization in general and their usefulness for policy analysis. The second and more specific issue concerns the taxonomy of intergovernmental grants and the limits of the current classifications. Full Article
fiscal The system of revenue sharing and fiscal transfers in China By www.oecd-ilibrary.org Published On :: Wed, 27 Feb 2013 14:30:00 GMT The main features of China’s current sub-national finance arrangements date back to the 1994 tax reform. China has a multi-level government structure that shares national tax revenues through a system of tax sharing and transfers, and divides spending assignments and responsibilities. Full Article
fiscal Choosing fiscal consolidation instruments compatible with growth and equity By www.oecd.org Published On :: Tue, 02 Jul 2013 17:15:00 GMT This study proposes a structured approach to selecting instruments of fiscal consolidation that are consistent with growth, equity and global-rebalancing objectives, which is then illustrated with a particular application. Full Article
fiscal Governments should target prudent debt levels and fiscal rules will help get there By www.oecd.org Published On :: Fri, 03 Jul 2015 15:00:00 GMT Governments should set prudent debt targets to ensure that public finances serve to promote economic growth and stability, according to new OECD research. Full Article
fiscal Tackling the three main challenges in Costa Rica: fiscal reform, reverting the slowdown in productivity and reducing inequality By oecdecoscope.wordpress.com Published On :: Tue, 19 Jul 2016 10:35:00 GMT Costa Rica’s economic, social and environmental achievements are impressive. It has succeeded in combining rising living standards, virtually universal health care, pension and primary education systems with sustainable use of natural resources. Full Article
fiscal Does Fiscal Decentralisation Foster Regional Convergence? By www.oecd.org Published On :: Fri, 23 Sep 2016 06:16:00 GMT Across the OECD, GDP per capita is converging. In contrast, regional disparities – or differences in GDP per capita across jurisdictions – are rising, mainly as a result of widening productivity differences. Fiscal decentralisation could help reduce them again. According to new OECD research, assigning more ownsource revenue to sub-national governments dampens regional GDP disparities and underpins regional convergence. Full Article
fiscal Using the fiscal levers to escape the low-growth trap By www.oecd.org Published On :: Thu, 24 Nov 2016 00:49:00 GMT Using fiscal levers to escape the low-growth trap Full Article
fiscal Make better use of fiscal initiatives to escape low-growth trap, OECD says in latest Global Economic Outlook By www.oecd.org Published On :: Mon, 28 Nov 2016 09:02:00 GMT Expansionary fiscal initiatives and maintaining trade openness are needed to push the global economy out of today’s low-growth trap, according to the OECD’s latest Global Economic Outlook. Full Article
fiscal Estonia: Using fiscal space for a more inclusive growth By oecdecoscope.wordpress.com Published On :: Mon, 25 Sep 2017 15:31:00 GMT Estonian growth is picking up again strongly in 2017 and the level of activity has finally surpassed its pre-crisis level, almost 10 years after the outset of the financial crisis. However, poverty remains among the highest in the OECD. Full Article
fiscal Ensuring fiscal sustainability in Japan in the context of a shrinking and ageing population By www.oecd-ilibrary.org Published On :: Wed, 04 Oct 2017 09:00:00 GMT With gross government debt of 219% of GDP in 2016, Japan’s fiscal situation is in uncharted territory and puts the economy at risk. Full Article