Khaleej Times

BoJ ready to ease further if needed

- Leika Kihara

washington — Bank of Japan (BoJ) governor Haruhiko Kuroda said on Friday the central bank was ready to expand monetary stimulus if needed, brushing aside the view the BoJ had little ammunition left to fight the next economic downturn.

Kuroda said it was true major central banks may have less room to cut interest rates because they are already very low after years of aggressive monetary easing.

“But that doesn’t mean central banks have no ammunition left to ease further in response to financial developmen­ts,” Kuroda told a news conference after the Group of 20 finance leaders’ meeting.

“The BoJ also has room to ease monetary policy further if doing so becomes necessary,” he said.

The remarks underscore the challenge major central banks face as they struggle to battle growing overseas headwinds to their economies with a dwindling policy tool kit.

The Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank have paused in their efforts to dial back crisis-mode policies. But the BOJ has failed to fire up inflation to its elusive 2 per cent target despite years of money printing. It is now faced with the growing demerits of prolonged easing, such as the pain ultra-low rates inflict on financial institutio­ns’ profits.

Kuroda also said he has no plans now to change the central bank’s forward guidance, or the message it sends to signal its policy intentions to financial markets.

“Our forward guidance was introduced to clarify our stance of patiently maintainin­g powerful monetary easing,” Kuroda said.

“I think that stance is understood well by market players. In that sense, our forward guidance

Our forward guidance was introduced to clarify our stance of patiently maintainin­g powerful monetary easing Haruhiko Kuroda, Governor, Bank of Japan

is showing its intended effect,” he said. Kuroda made the remarks, when asked about a proposal by the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund that the BOJ enhance its communicat­ion with markets by clarifying the timing for maintainin­g ultra-low interest rates.

Under a policy dubbed yield curve control (YCC), the BOJ guides short-term interest rates at minus 0.1 per cent and the longterm yield around zero per cent.

In July last year, it introduced a forward guidance pledge to keep interest rates very low for an “extended period” — language some critics have said is too vague.

Kuroda said the current forward guidance was appropriat­e because it struck the right balance between the need to make the commitment effective and to leave flexibilit­y for future policy decisions.

He also said there was no need to modify a loose pledge the BOJ makes to buy government bonds so that the balance of its holdings increase at an annual pace of roughly 80 trillion yen ($714.16 billion).

Despite having shifted to a policy targeting rates, the BOJ has kept the bond-buying commitment to appease advocates of aggressive money printing in its nine-member board. —

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