Oman Daily Observer

Bank of Japan’s Kuroda rules out ‘helicopter money’

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LONDON: Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda ruled out the idea of using “helicopter money” — or directly underwriti­ng the budget deficit — to combat deflation, as policymake­rs in Tokyo gear up to expand existing stimulus programmes.

Japanese markets have risen this month on speculatio­n that authoritie­s, battling to revive an economy dogged by decades of anaemic inflation, will resort to using helicopter money, possibly issuing perpetual bonds to underwrite public debt.

But in a BBC interview broadcast on Thursday, Kuroda said the central bank already had mechanisms in place to ease policy further if needed, and that Japan should not forfeit a clear separation between fiscal and monetary institutio­ns.

“I don’t think at this stage we should abandon this institutio­nal setting. No need and no possibilit­y for helicopter money,” Kuroda told the radio documentar­y.

The yen shot up after Kuroda’s comments, hitting a high of 116.44 yen per euro, up 1 per cent on the day.

A BoJ spokesman said Kuroda was reiteratin­g his usual stance. The date of the interview was not clear.

Last week a senior advisor to Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said that Japan should not resort to helicopter money.

A majority of economists polled by Reuters this week expected the BoJ to ease policy later this month, forecastin­g a combinatio­n of measures in another attempt to kick-start inflation.

Kuroda, who was interviewe­d in his office in Tokyo, said the BoJ had three existing policy options: quantitati­ve and qualitativ­e easing, and negative interest rates.

 ??  ?? BoJ Gorverner Haruhiko Kuroda
BoJ Gorverner Haruhiko Kuroda

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