BOJ maintains aggressive stimulus but cuts inflation outlook
Wednesday, 18 March 2015 00:01
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Bank of Japan (BOJ) Governor Haruhiko Kuroda speaks during a news conference at the BOJ headquarters in Tokyo 17 March, 2015 – REUTERSReuters: The Bank of Japan maintained its massive stimulus program on Tuesday and signalled its conviction that a steady economic recovery will help achieve its ambitious price target without immediate, additional monetary easing.
The Central Bank, however, offered a slightly more downbeat view on the price outlook, though it stressed the slowdown in inflation was due to temporary declines in oil prices.
As widely expected, the BOJ maintained its stimulus programme that pledges to print money at an annual pace of 80 trillion yen ($ 659 billion).
“Japan’s economy is expected to continue recovering moderately as a trend,” the BOJ said in a statement issued after the decision.
BOJ policymakers have sent a concerted signal to investors that while they expect inflation to grind to a halt in coming months, they see no need to respond unless the price weakness hits inflation expectations.
“Annual consumer inflation is seen moving around zero percent for the time being on declines in energy prices,” the BOJ said. That was a slightly less optimistic view than last month, when it said inflation will ‘slow for the time being’.
A slump in oil prices has slowed annual core consumer inflation to 0.2% in January, well below the BOJ’s 2% target, keeping alive expectations the central bank will top up its already aggressive asset-buying programme this year.
“For the time being, the BOJ can continue to argue that the slowdown in inflation is due to supply-side problems in the oil market. Given that Japanese stocks are doing well, there’s no need to ease policy now,” said Hiroaki Muto, senior economist at Sumitomo Mitsui Asset Management.
“However, the BOJ will probably have to push back its two-year timeframe (for hitting its price target) when it updates its forecasts in October, which will raise questions about monetary easing.”
At his post-meeting briefing, Governor Haruhiko Kuroda is likely to reiterate that continued improvements in the economy will nudge companies into raising wages and capital expenditure, helping Japan hit its 2% inflation target in the year beginning in April.
Japan’s economy is emerging from last year’s recession thanks to a much-awaited rebound in exports and factory output.
But private consumption remains soft as households continue to curb spending after being hit by last year’s tax hike and the rising cost of living from a weak yen.
On Wednesday, Japan’s biggest firms will announce wage plans following annual talks with labour unions, the results of which will be key to the success of Premier Shinzo Abe’s push to drive Japan sustainably out of deflation.
The BOJ has stood pat on policy since expanding its massive stimulus program in October last year to prevent slumping oil prices, and a subsequent slowdown in inflation, from delaying a sustained end to deflation.