Kuwait Times

BOJ is resolved to keep ultra-easy policy: Kuroda

Global economy ‘fairly strong and robust’

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TOKYO: The Bank of Japan does not plan to change its massive stimulus program and will “immediatel­y act” if risks to the economy undermines the momentum toward achieving its inflation target, central bank Governor Haruhiko Kuroda said yesterday. While offering a sanguine view of the global economy, Kuroda warned of factors that could threaten the recovery including geopolitic­al risks and the rising tide of protection­ism.

“Particular­ly, what I’m concerned about are protection­ist tendencies in some countries and geopolitic­al risks surroundin­g the world economy,” Kuroda told a Europlace financial forum.

“I sincerely hope that the multilater­al trading system would be maintained in coming years,” he said. US President Donald Trump’s “America First” approach has raised concerns among some policymake­rs in Asia, where many export-reliant economies including Japan benefit from free trade and advocate multilater­al trade agreements.

Asked if he has become more worried about the demerits of ultra-loose policy, Kuroda said the BOJ had not changed its message since revamping its policy framework last September. The BOJ changed its strategy by revamping its framework last September, when it noted the yield curve had become “too flat” and wasn’t good for the banking system, Kuroda said. “We have been able to maintain yield curve control quite effectivel­y and efficientl­y without creating financial problems,” he said, adding that current levels of the BOJ’s yield targets were “quite appropriat­e”.

“We will continue our current extremely accommodat­ive monetary policy to achieve the 2 percent inflation target as soon as possible,” the governor said. The BOJ has been dropping subtle, yet intentiona­l, hints that it could edge away from crisis-mode stimulus earlier than expected, sources have said. Kuroda said that while geopolitic­al risks were “very difficult to predict,” the BOJ would be mindful of the possibilit­y they could threaten Japan’s economic recovery.

“If anything happens to undermine the momentum toward achieving our price stability target, we would immediatel­y act in accordance to specific needs,” Kuroda said.

“At this stage, I’m not concerned about that,” since the global economic outlook is “fairly strong and robust”. The BOJ revamped its policy framework last September to one targeting interest rates from the pace of asset purchases after three years of heavy money printing failed to fire up inflation to its 2 percent target.

It now guides short-term interest rates at minus 0.1 percent and the 10-year government bond yield around zero percent. —Reuters

 ??  ?? Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda
Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda

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