Oman Daily Observer

Bank of Japan to keep Kuroda at helm until 2023

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TOKYO: The Bank of Japan is to keep Haruhiko Kuroda at its helm until 2023 under government plans to retain him as a pillar of its pro-spending policy, reports said on Saturday.

The government will propose to parliament reappointi­ng 73-year-old Kuroda for a second five-year term as early as this month, the Nikkei business daily quoted anonymous government sources as saying. His current term ends on April 8.

Other media, also quoting anonymous government sources, said Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s administra­tion was in the final stages of arranging Kuroda’s reappointm­ent.

He would be the first BoJ governor to serve two terms in half a century as Abe’s ruling coalition has a comfortabl­e majority in both houses of parliament.

Soon after he became prime minister, Abe handpicked Kuroda, a former finance ministry bureaucrat who later headed the Manila-based Asian Developmen­t Bank, as BoJ chief.

Kuroda has since taken drastic measures to pump money into markets in what was called a monetary “bazooka”.

It has played a key role in Abe’s growth blitz — a mixture of huge monetary easing, government spending and reforms to the economy. “Mr Kuroda is a symbol of Abenomics and replacing him would pose risks,” the Nikkei quoted a top government official as saying.

Their efforts have weakened the yen and boosted share prices and corporate profits.

The Japanese economy has been expanding on robust exports and domestic demand spurred by infrastruc­ture upgrades ahead of the 2020 Olympic Games.

 ?? — AFP ?? Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda (C) answers questions at a session of the House of Representa­tives Budget Committee at parliament in Tokyo.
— AFP Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda (C) answers questions at a session of the House of Representa­tives Budget Committee at parliament in Tokyo.

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