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BOJ deputy pledges to maintain stimulus despite price pressures

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TOKYO The Bank of Japan must maintain current monetary stimulus to create sustainabl­e increases in prices, corporate profits, jobs and wages, its deputy governor said yesterday, dismissing speculatio­n about an early exit from accommodat­ive settings.

With inflation in Japan far below levels in the United States and elsewhere, the BOJ is lagging well behind other major central banks in dialing back crisis-mode stimulus.

However, surging global commodity prices and the weakening yen have boosted the cost-push inflation, raising speculatio­n among investors that the BOJ may shift away from its current stimulus policy.

Masayoshi Amamiya shrugged off the chance of early exit from stimulus policy.

"What's important is to continue our powerful monetary easing to firmly support economic activity of companies and households," Amamiya told lawmakers.

If monetary stimulus is reduced now, that would cause downward pressure on the economy, making

2 per cent inflation even more of a distant target, Amamiya added.

Amamiya and finance minister Shunichi Suzuki, both appearing in the same parliament session, warned against the yen's rapid weakening, calling recent excess volatility in the foreign exchange market "undesirabl­e".

Suzuki said he was communicat­ing with US and other currency authoritie­s to respond to currency moves as appropriat­e, following the Group of Seven (G7) advanced nations' agreement on currencies.

That agreement calls for market-determined exchange rates and the need to consult with G7 members on action in the currency market while acknowledg­ing the adverse effects excess volatility and disorderly movements can have on economy.

The Ministry of Finance, which is responsibl­e for currency policy, holds foreign reserves worth US$1.35 trillion that it can use when needed for currency interventi­on through the BOJ, Suzuki said, without elaboratin­g.

 ?? AFP/VNA Photo ?? A shop in Tokyo. surging global commodity prices and the weakening yen have boosted the costpush inflation in Japan.
AFP/VNA Photo A shop in Tokyo. surging global commodity prices and the weakening yen have boosted the costpush inflation in Japan.

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