IMF sees scope for Bank of Japan to keep raising rates
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[August 24, 2024] By
Leika Kihara and Howard Schneider
JACKSON HOLE, Wyoming (Reuters) - The Bank of Japan can raise interest
rates gradually as heightening inflation expectations leave further
scope to normalize its ultra-loose monetary policy, the International
Monetary Fund said on Friday.
The speed of further rate increases will be "very data-dependent," as
the BOJ will look at the pace at which inflation, wage growth and
inflation expectations heighten in normalizing policy, said IMF chief
economist Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas.
Gourinchas said Japan's inflation is higher than 2% and inflation
expectations have started to move towards, or "maybe even a little bit
above" the BOJ's 2% target.
As a result, the BOJ is normalizing the extremely loose monetary policy
it has had for decades, which is "certainly something that we think is a
good development for Japan," he told Reuters in an interview on the
sidelines of the annual economic symposium in Jackson Hole, Wyoming.
"Certainly in our assessment, there is scope for further normalization
of monetary policy going forward, and policy rates to increase gradually
for some time," he said.
The BOJ ended negative interest rates in March and raised its short-term
policy rate to 0.25% in July in landmark steps away from a decade-long
radical stimulus program.
BOJ Governor Kazuo Ueda has signaled the bank's readiness to keep
raising interest rates if inflation makes progress toward durably
meeting its 2% target, as it projects.
While Japan's economic growth will slow in 2024 from the fiscal
stimulus-driven expansion last year, what is important for the BOJ is
not just economic activity but inflation, Gourinchas said.
Unlike other central banks that focused on taming inflation
expectations, the BOJ had to pull them up from multiple decades of
too-low levels, he said.
"What the BOJ is trying to engineer is a realignment of inflation
expectations," Gourinchas said.
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Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas, Director and Economic Counsellor,
Research Department IMF, speaks during an interview with Reuters on
the first day of the annual meeting of the International Monetary
Fund and the World Bank, in Marrakech, Morocco, October 9, 2023.
REUTERS/Susana Vera/File Photo
"We're expecting that as inflation expectations remain stable at
their new level close to 2%, the BOJ will start normalizing policy
rates," he said.
The BOJ's surprise July rate increase and Ueda's hawkish signal
jolted financial markets in August, forcing his deputy to offer
dovish reassurances that no hikes would come until markets
stabilize.
Speaking in parliament on Friday, Governor Ueda reaffirmed the BOJ's
readiness to keep raising rates but with a close eye on the economic
fallout from still-unstable markets.
Gourinchas said the recent market turbulence was due to a mix of
factors including prospects of higher Japanese interest rates, and
weak U.S. jobs data that fueled expectations of faster-than-expected
rate cuts by the Federal Reserve.
Thin market trading during the August holiday season, coupled with a
massive unwinding of the yen carry trade, also heightened market
volatility, he said.
"I think the market overreacted," he said. "I think a lot of this
has been resolved, but we could see other episodes of market
volatility as markets are ... in a little bit of an uncharted
territory" with many central banks starting to ease policy, while
the BOJ begins to raise rates, he said.
(Reporting by Leika Kihara and Howard Schneider; Editing by Rod
Nickel)
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