The Borneo Post

Bank of Japan tweaks monetary policy with inflation target distant

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TOKYO: Japan’s central bank revised down inflation forecasts yesterday, making only minor tweaks to a monetary policy that has so far fallen short of lifting prices and boosting the world’s third-largest economy.

There was widespread speculatio­n in the run-up to the Bank of Japan’s two-day meeting that it would adjust its ultra-loose policy, seeking to offset the effects of negative interest rates and its massive bond and asset buying.

But the bank offered only marginal adjustment­s to its policy, introducin­g some flexibilit­y, and revised down further its forecasts for inflation through fiscal 2020.

The BoJ has struggled for years to reach the 2.0 inflation rate thought necessary to turbocharg­e Japan’s economy, and has defended its decision to maintain its monetary easing even as other central banks tighten policy.

Analysts said the bank had defied those expecting major shifts as a possible precursor to a tightening of policy.

“Despite the adjustment, the statement indicates the Bank of Japan is still sticking to the status quo,” said Masakazu Satou, senior analyst at Gaiame Online.

The bank has faced criticism for the side effects of its policy, including concerns that its massive purchases are skewing the bond market and financial markets.

In a nod to those concerns, it said it would seek to keep yields on benchmark 10-year government bonds around zero per cent, but added “the yields may move upward and downward to some extent” and said it would “conduct purchases in a flexible manner”.

The bank also said it would shift its purchases of exchangetr­aded fund away from the Nikkei towards the Topix exchange, to address concerns it is inadverten­tly hiking stock prices, and could “increase or decrease the amount of purchases depending on market conditions”.

The BoJ’s aggressive monetary easing has been the key weapon in the battle against deflation, but the central bank has been forced to regularly abandon deadlines for the 2.0 per cent goal. — AFP

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