Business World

BoJ tightening to begin sooner than expected

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JAPAN’S ECONOMY will exceed growth forecasts this year, prompting the central bank to tighten monetary policy by midyear, said Allen Sinai, president of Decision Economics Inc.

Sinai said he expects Japan’s economy to grow 2% in 2018, and even faster in 2019, perhaps as much as 2.5%. “What has snuck up on everybody is the world business cycle is really clicking,” he said in an interview in Tokyo on Wednesday, where he was meeting with policy makers.

The market’s reaction on Tuesday to the Bank of Japan’s reduced buying of long- dated bonds illustrate­s growing jitters over when the BoJ will turn toward policy normalizat­ion. Economists cautioned against reading too much into the BoJ’s bond buying, but with Japan’s economy in its longest expansion

since the mid-1990s, expectatio­ns are rising that the BoJ will join its global peers and begin normalizin­g policy as soon as this year.

‘UPSIDE SURPRISE’

“The markets and I are sensing, because of the fundamenta­ls of the Japanese economy, an upside surprise potentiall­y on growth and on inflation, and therefore a surprise out of the BoJ,” Sinai said.

Inflation remains well below the BoJ’s 2% target, but the central bank’s preferred gauge rose steadily throughout last year, hitting 0.9% in November. Sinai said he expects inflation to reach 2% before the BoJ’s projected time frame of “around” the fiscal year beginning in April 2019.

Sinai said his firm is forecastin­g that the BoJ will “become less accommodat­ive” in the next three to six months, allowing interest rates to rise while setting an upper limit, he said.

BoJ Governor Haruhiko Kuroda said last month that the central bank won’t raise rates just because the economy is doing well because its ultimate target is inflation.

Sinai stands on the bullish side of prognostic­ators. Of 41 economists who expect the BoJ’s next move to be tightening, 19 forecast it to come this year, including five who see it happening in April, according to a Bloomberg survey last month.

A year ago, Sinai was roughly on target when he predicted Japan’s economy would grow 1.5% to 1.75% in 2017, about double the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund’s forecast at the time. He was wide of the mark on the yen, though, forecastin­g it would weaken to as much as 135 against the dollar by the end of the year.

‘KNOWN QUANTITY’

Sinai said it would “absolutely” be good if Kuroda remained governor after his current term ends in April, given that he is a “known quantity” who has proven capable of doing the job. Prime Minister Shinzo Abe would be taking a risk if he chose someone else, Sinai said.

Even with his bullish outlook, Sinai sees challenges ahead for Japanese policy makers. In particular, uprooting the deflationa­ry mindset of Japanese consumers will remain a struggle, he said.

“The history of that says that once it’s there it takes a long, long time to change,” he said. Bloomberg

 ??  ?? THE BANK of Japan is expected to start tightening by midyear.
THE BANK of Japan is expected to start tightening by midyear.

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