BOJ risks being behind the curve on inflation, says ex-official | Inquirer Business

BOJ risks being behind the curve on inflation, says ex-official

/ 06:03 PM November 02, 2023

Bank of Japan headquarters

Japanese national flag is hoisted atop the headquarters of Bank of Japan in Tokyo, Japan Sept 20, 2023. REUTERS/Issei Kato/File photo

TOKYO  – The Bank of Japan may be underestimating the risk of being too late in addressing mounting inflationary pressures from rising service prices and wages, the central bank’s former top economist said.

The bank on Tuesday raised its inflation forecasts to well above its 2 percent target for this year and next but said the revisions were largely due to transitory factors, such as more companies passing on higher raw material costs through hikes in goods prices.

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The BOJ projected inflation would recede below 2 percent in 2025, when cost-push factors run their course and begin to be replaced more fully by upward pressure from higher wages.

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READ: BOJ likely to lift inflation forecasts, debate yield control’s future

Seisaku Kameda, who was involved in drafting the BOJ’s forecasts as its top economist from 2020 to 2022, told Reuters the central bank may be overlooking a recent steady rise in service prices by focusing too much on cost-push inflation.

“While cost-push inflation remains the key driver of price rises now, we’re also seeing service prices rise steadily. Wages are also likely to increase significantly next year,” Kameda said in an interview on Wednesday, a day after the bank loosened the 1 percent cap on its target for long-term bond yields.

“Even as cost-push pressures ease, the rise in service prices and wages could broaden and persist,” he said. “I don’t think the BOJ is focusing on such price pressures as much as it should, putting it at risk of being behind the curve.”

Kameda said he expects the BOJ to take further steps to phase out its bond yield control policy, before ending negative short-term rates as early as April.

READ: Inflation in Japan’s capital slows but pressures persist

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“The sooner the BOJ normalizes policy, the better, as Japan shifts from a deflation-ridden economy to a country that’s finally seeing some inflation,” said Kameda, an economist at a think tank affiliated with Japan’s Sompo Holdings insurance group.

With inflation exceeding the BOJ’s 2 percent inflation target for more than a year, many analysts expect the bank to end its bond yield control and negative rate policy next year.

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BOJ Governor Kazuo Ueda has stressed the need to keep policy ultra-loose until the recent cost-driven inflation turns into price rises driven by robust domestic demand and wage growth.

TAGS: Bank of Japan, Inflation

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