TOKYO, May 21 (AFP) - The Japanese yen has not fallen too far against the dollar, Japan's Finance Minister Kiichi Miyazawa said Friday. Asked if he thought the yen's sudden fall against the dollar this week was an overshoot, Miyazawa said: "No, I do not." "But I am monitoring carefully the movements," he told reporters. By 11:00 a.m. (0200 GMT) the dollar had slipped back against the yen to trade at 123.82-84 yen from 124.27 yen in New York late Thursday. In recent days the dollar has climbed against the Japanese currency, in part over concerns of an imminent US rate rise and also fuelled by anxiety over the slow speed of recovery in Japan. Miyazawa said another stimulus spending plan, financed by a supplementary budget, may be needed this year. In the past Miyzawa has ruled out any extra budget saying two huge packages last year worth a combined 40 trillion yen (325 billion dollars) were enough. "If the budget already allocated falls short," then another budget may be needed, he said. "Employment is the most important issue, and I wouldn't spare any expense for that," he said. Japan's unemployment rate is now at a record high 4.8 percent. -=-=- 