Reuters/Tokyo
Two years into so-called Abenomics – a mix of aggressive monetary and fiscal policy plus structural reform – the Bank of Japan is
struggling to reach an ambitious inflation target and convince Japanese that years of deflation are in the past.
Instead, inflation is slowing, the economy emerging from recession and confidence among the economy’s bedrock manufacturers is
slipping.
Yesterday, the Bank of Japan (BoJ) sharply cut its inflation forecast and the governor conceded it may take longer than expected
to hit 2% inflation, underlining the challenges of meeting the target as oil prices continue to slump.
The yen rebounded against the dollar and Japanese equities fell after the central bank held off on expanding its stimulus drive,
despite nearly halving its core consumer inflation forecast for the year beginning in April to 1%.
Governor Haruhiko Kuroda defended the decision, saying that while the lower cost of fuel may weigh on inflation short-term, it
will stimulate the economy and thus accelerate price growth.
“Looking at wage negotiations and inflation expectations, fortunately there is no concern of Japan being beset by a deflationary
mindset again,” Kuroda said. “If Japan is making steady progress toward achieving 2% inflation, there’s no need to take
additional steps.”
As widely expected, the BoJ maintained its pledge to increase base money at an annual pace of ¥80tn ($678bn) by buying government
bonds and other securities. The central bank instead extended by a year the deadline of several loan schemes aimed at encouraging
banks to boost lending, and expanded the size of one of them.
Japan’s economy slipped into recession in the third quarter of last year and is only barely emerging from the doldrums as a hit
from a sales tax hike in April begins to ease.
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe was given a fresh mandate to put an end to 15 years of deflation with his stimulus policies, after his
ruling party’s landslide victory in snap elections in December.
Less than three months ago, the BoJ expanded its “quantitative and qualitative easing” (QQE) to prevent oil price falls and a
subsequent slowdown in price rises from damping down inflation expectations.
Crude oil prices have nearly halved since then, keeping alive expectations the BoJ will expand QQE again. Kuroda has repeatedly
said the bank will respond should inflation fail to reach 2% “in a period centred on fiscal 2015.”
In a review of its long-term estimates, the BoJ cut next fiscal year’s core consumer inflation forecast to 1% from 1.7% projected
three months ago.
But it roughly maintained its forecast that inflation will exceed 2% in fiscal 2016 and revised up its economic growth forecast
for next fiscal year, pointing to a rebound in exports and an expected boost from government stimulus measures.
Kuroda admitted that Japan may not see inflation hit 2% until fiscal 2016 depending on oil price moves. But he saw no need to
water down the BoJ’s commitment, arguing that the bank never promised to meet the target strictly in fiscal 2015. “We’ve been
saying (2% inflation) will likely be achieved in a period centring fiscal 2015, so there’s a possibility the timing may stretch
into fiscal 2016,” he said.
Some market players took his remarks as a sign the BoJ won’t ease again any time soon.
“Even if inflation slows in the near term, the BoJ is not going to react,” said Hiroshi Shiraishi, senior economist at BNP
Paribas Securities. “The BoJ is prepared to look through near-term weakness in inflation.”
Others weren’t so sure.
“Kuroda was saying that as long as falling oil prices do not cause the return of a deflation mindset, leading to a decline in
wages and prices, the BoJ won’t rush to additional easing,” said Masamichi Adachi, senior economist at JPMorgan Securities Japan.
“That said, I think there’s a 60% chance of easing in July. The BoJ’s price outlook is way higher than ours.”
Analysts polled by Reuters expect core consumer inflation to hit 0.6% next fiscal year and see the bank easing again as early as
in April.
Kuroda: Japan may not see inflation hit 2% until fiscal 2016.