Bangkok Post

Japan’s inflation hits 40-year high

BoJ governor rules out interest rate increase until wages rise more

- TETSUSHI KAJIMOTO TOKYO (REUTERS)

Japan’s core consumer inflation accelerate­d to a 40-year high in October, driven by currency weakness and imported cost pressures that the central bank shrugs off as it sticks to a policy of ultra-low interest rates.

The nationwide core consumer price index (CPI) was up 3.6% on a year earlier, exceeding the 3.5% rise expected by economists and the 3% gain seen in September.

It was the largest jump since February 1982, when a Middle East crisis stemming from the Iran-Iraq war disrupted crude oil supply and triggered a spike in energy prices.

The rise in the index, which excludes volatile fresh food prices but includes oil products, confirmed that inflation remained above the 2% goal of the Bank of Japan for a seventh consecutiv­e month.

But economists do not expect the BoJ to join a global trend of raising interest rates, because it sees this year’s accelerati­on in inflation as a cost-push episode that will fade as import costs stop pushing.

Foreign supply constraint­s have driven up prices of imported food, industrial commoditie­s and manufactur­ing parts, and so has a fall in the yen, which in dollar terms is down more than 20% this year.

“I haven’t changed my view that the rise will start to slow down soon,” said Takeshi Minami, chief economist at Norinchuki­n Research Institute, noting declines in global grain prices. “I expect inflation to peak by year-end and the rise in prices to start diminishin­g in the new year.”

BoJ governor Haruhiko Kuroda said yesterday that wages must rise by around 3% for inflation to sustainabl­y hit the bank’s 2% target, stressing the need to avoid raising interest rates until the economy strengthen­s enough to further drive up pay.

The central bank is keeping longterm interest rates around zero and short-term rates at -0.1%.

The October data showed raw-material price rises and the yen’s weakness had driven a 15.2% increase in energy costs, while food excluding perishable­s was up by 5.9%, the fastest rise since March 1981.

Among food items, 88% were more costly than a year before, led by alcoholic drinks, such as beer and sake.

Prices of household durable goods were up 11.8%, their biggest rise since March 1975, driven by costs of transporta­tion, raw materials and energy and by the weak currency.

The data suggests Japanese firms may be shaking off their deflationa­ry mindset as they apply price rises to a broadening range of products.

Of the 522 items composing the core consumer price index, 406 were more expensive in October than a year earlier. In September, 385 were.

The BoJ has forecast average prices for the fiscal year to March 2023 will be 3% higher than in 2021-22 but that the rise for 2023-24 will be only half as great, because commodity and other cost-push factors will have subsided.

 ?? ?? Among food items, 88% are more costly than a year before, led by alcoholic drinks, such as beer and sake.
Among food items, 88% are more costly than a year before, led by alcoholic drinks, such as beer and sake.

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