How the Bank of Japan's plan for a smooth stimulus exit stumbled
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[March 20, 2024] By
Leika Kihara, Takahiko Wada and Mariko Katsumura
TOKYO (Reuters) - The Bank of Japan's strategy for an orderly exit from
years of massive stimulus unraveled on an overcast day in December when
Governor Kazuo Ueda and two deputies gathered at the bank's Tokyo
headquarters.
Inflation was slowing more than expected, complicating the central
bank's plan to end negative interest rates by March or April and then
follow quickly with further increases. The officials considered two
alternatives.
The first option was to wait for signs of economic improvement and then
go ahead as planned. The second was to end negative rates but hold off
on subsequent increases.
Ultimately, the MIT-trained Ueda went with the second option, allowing
Japan to shed its title as the last country with negative interest rates
but leaving it short of its hoped-for normalization and still facing
years of near-zero rates that pressure the hard-hit yen.
"With the economy lacking momentum, there was a growing feeling within
the BOJ that inflation might not stay around 2% that long," said one
person familiar with the deliberations, referring to the bank's key
target.
"The BOJ leadership probably realized that time was running short, if
they wanted to end negative rates."
The decision was also complicated by differences between Ueda's two
deputies, as well as the governor's wavering on the exit timing. The
existence of the two plans, and other details about the deliberations,
are reported for the first time by Reuters.
This account is based on interviews with 25 incumbent and former central
bank officials with direct knowledge of the interactions, or familiar
with the personalities and dynamics of the bank's leaders, as well as
five government officials in regular contact with BOJ officials.
They all spoke on the condition of anonymity as they were not authorized
to discuss the matters publicly.
A BOJ spokesperson said the bank would not comment on the deliberations
outlined by Reuters.
Reuters also spoke to five small-business owners to gauge how the policy
shift could unfold across an economy battered by decline and deflation.
On Tuesday, the BOJ drew the curtain on eight years of negative rates
and other remnants of unorthodox policy, delivering its first increase
in borrowing costs since 2007.
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"It's a watershed moment for Japan and for central banks across the
world, as it finally puts an end to abnormal monetary stimulus," said
former BOJ official Nobuyasu Atago.
Still, he said, it could take several years for short-term rates to move
up to even 1%.
LOCAL TREMORS
Even a slight rise in interest rates could send tremors through
struggling local economies in Japan, reflecting how deflation and a
diminishing population have squeezed demand.
"The prospect of higher interest rates has become a significant concern
for traditional inns," said Koji Ishida, who runs a hotel company and
heads the local tourism association in Yugawara, a hot-spring resort
southwest of Tokyo known for its ryokan, or traditional inns.
In autumn, Ishida received a frantic call from the family that owns one
of the town's most storied ryokan, saying it was nearing collapse and
asking for help.
"As neighbors, we needed to help them," Ishida said. He worried the
failure of a prominent ryokan could tarnish the image of
tourism-dependent Yugawara and trigger "a chain reaction of
bankruptcies".
Seiranso, a 94-year-old ryokan known for its mountainside outdoor bath
at the foot of a waterfall, last month filed for bankruptcy protection
with around 850 million yen ($5.7 million) in debt, including pandemic
loans.
Under those proceedings, it aims to turn itself around with backing from
Ishida's company, according to its website. A lawyer for Seiranso
declined to comment.
Almost one-third of ryokan lost money in the last financial year,
according to data from the Japan Ryokan and Hotel Association, an
industry group.
"The industry needs zero-interest rates," said Masanori Numao, whose
family runs a ryokan in Kinugawa Onsen, a hot-spring resort in Nikko
National Park, where their roots go back more than 300 years.
Forty years ago, Kinugawa was thriving; after sunset there were
"beautiful geisha", the clatter of wooden geta clogs and laughter from
karaoke bars that lined the narrow streets, Numao said.
Today, tourists sometimes photograph derelict hotels abandoned after the
bubble economy burst in the early 1990s.
Ryokan owners struggle to renovate ageing buildings because banks are
unwilling to lend them more, making it difficult to attract tourists,
Numao said.
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Masanori Numao, whose family runs a ryokan or hot spring inn in
Kinugawa Onsen hot-spring resort near Nikko National Park, walks on
Takimi bridge in Nikko, Tochigi prefecture, Japan, March 15, 2024.
REUTERS/Issei Kato
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Higher interest rates would increase pressure on hot-spring towns
like Kinugawa, he said. "The government is just watching resort
towns drown."
POLICY DIFFERENCES
In taking over the BOJ last April, Ueda was mandated to dismantle
the radical stimulus of his predecessor, Haruhiko Kuroda.
Kuroda's "bazooka" approach initially helped boost stock prices. But
it crushed bank margins and caused unwelcome yen declines that
lawmakers feared could hurt voters through rising living costs.
Ueda and his deputies were unanimous on the need for an exit, but
not on the timing.
Choosing the second option mended, at least momentarily, the quiet
tension between the two deputy governors, career central banker
Shinichi Uchida and former bank regulator Ryozo Himino.
Ueda, Uchida and Himino did not respond to Reuters questions.
Uchida was cautious about ending negative rates too hastily,
believing that the BOJ should allow the economy to run hot by
keeping ultra-low rates for a prolonged period.
By contrast, Himino favoured an early exit from what he saw as
excessive monetary support that could sow the seeds of a future
bubble.
As an outsider, Himino wasn't afraid to challenge some of the bank's
traditions.
At one informal meeting late last year, he complained about the
BOJ's management style and suggested changes, ruffling feathers
among some officials within the institution, according to two people
with knowledge of the matter.
Throughout the discussions, Ueda would listen silently and rarely
spoke up. People who know him say the governor was neither a hawk
nor a dove.
Having studied under former Federal Reserve vice chairman Stanley
Fischer, who also taught former central bankers Ben Bernanke and
Mario Draghi, Ueda combined faith in economic models and a sense of
pragmatism.
However, he was not quick to make decisions, opting to analyse
various options thoroughly until the last minute.
"He's a pure academic who's great at comparing data and strategies,"
said a person who has known Ueda for decades. "But making quick,
decisive decisions isn't his strength."
While the two deputies rarely exhibited differences in public, it
was usually Uchida who prevailed. Ueda relied heavily on Uchida's
expertise on the technical aspects of the bank's monetary tools.
Uchida was also the main interlocutor with officials from Prime
Minister Fumio Kishida's government, sounding out their views on
monetary policy and laying the groundwork for an exit.
Kishida's administration had been nudging the BOJ to phase out
stimulus in hope it would slow declines in the yen that were hurting
households through higher food and fuel costs.
"The government hopes the BOJ conducts monetary policy appropriately
towards sustainably and stably achieving its price target
accompanied by wage increases, with an eye on economic, price and
financial developments," a spokesperson for the prime minister's
office told Reuters.
Once there was consensus the BOJ would go with the second option,
Uchida proceeded with the next step of preparing markets.
In a speech in Nara in February, Uchida hinted at what a
post-negative rate monetary policy would look like.
Tuesday's policy shift roughly aligned with those clues.
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Ueda's choice of the second option means the BOJ will keep rates at
zero for a prolonged period, delaying Japan's return to normal
borrowing costs, said five of the sources familiar with the bank's
thinking. It will likely take years to reduce the bank's balance
sheet, which had ballooned after heavy asset-buying, three analysts
told Reuters.
There is near-consensus among BOJ watchers that the bank will move
very gradually, and allow short-term rates to rise to around 0.5%
over several years.
"Given Mr. Ueda's very cautious character and his focus on building
consensus within the board, he will likely take plenty of time and
proceed carefully in normalising policy," said former BOJ economist
Hideo Hayakawa.
($1 = 148.3800 yen)
(Reporting by Leika Kihara, Takahiko Wada and Mariko Katsumura,
Additional reporting by Daniel Leussink, Tetsushi Kajimoto,
Yoshifumi Takemoto, Kentaro Sugiyama, Takaya Yamaguchi and Anton
Bridge; Editing by David Dolan and David Crawshaw)
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