Prime Minister Shinzo Abe set out broadbrush outlines of the third of his "three arrows" of a plan dubbed "Abenomics", which is intended to turn around years of deflation in the world's third-largest economy.
The first two "arrows" -- a colossal government spending plan and aggressive monetary easing -- have fuelled optimism in an economy that has struggled for two decades.
Tokyo's main index, the Nikkei 225, has shot up around 70 per cent since late last year as a mood of optimism has gripped Japan and the once-painfully strong yen has shed around a quarter of its value.
Abe gave away little in the way of actual policy measures today before an audience of academics and businessmen, but said he intended to make life easier for companies.
"I will set the next three years as the period to promote investment... And will remove all the factors that deter domestic investment, taking comprehensive measures, such as reviewing the tax system, budget, finance, regulational reform, and setting up new systems," he said.
"Now is the time to release the third arrow to stimulate the corporate investment mindset," he said.
"With that, I would like to recover capital investment to 70 trillion yen, which was the level of private investment seen before the Lehman shock."
In a speech that was short on details, Abe said he wanted to triple foreign sales of Japanese infrastructure to 30 trillion yen by 2020.
"I will visit wherever in the world if time allows me, to try to make sales at the very highest level," he said, adding he would be in Myanmar later this month.
"In the next 10 years I will draft and implement plans to double income of agricultural households and villages," he said.
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