HomeNewsOpinionJapan | When too much inflation is a long-awaited victory

Japan | When too much inflation is a long-awaited victory

The Bank Of Japan pledged not just to hit 2 percent inflation, but to stay above it, way back in 2016. Now, prices are rising faster than the target and Kuroda’s decisions are getting tougher

August 22, 2022 / 17:57 IST
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You have to hand it to Haruhiko Kuroda. Despite his caricature as a laggard in a world where interest rates are marching higher, the Bank of Japan chief was cutting-edge when seeking to exceed his inflation target. It's just taken a while to get there. Six years, in fact.

Tempting as a victory lap might be for Kuroda, who retires next year, more hard work awaits. With inflation above the 2 percent goal for the fourth consecutive month in July, according to figures released on August 19, choices loom that were once considered so far in the distance as to be almost theoretical. Does Kuroda stand by his uber-easy stance or take a baby step toward adjusting interest rates to levels that aren't by global standards so abnormally low?

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What is normal in a country that flirted with deflation for much of the past three decades, pioneered zero rates, and was an early mover on quantitative easing? In some ways, the unconventional has become standard operating procedure in Japan, and quite familiar in the West. The case for deviating must be compelling. At the same time, if prices continue to creep upward toward 3 percent, it’s going to get harder for Kuroda to just say the equivalent of ‘No, no, no’ anytime a question is asked about the possibility of the slightest tweak to arrangements.

When the BOJ enshrined in policy the desire to reach beyond 2 percent, few people paid much heed. Consumer prices were declining in September 2016. The idea was that getting inflation above the goal — and tolerating that for a while — boosted the chances it would settle around the target. It didn’t just have to fall across the line; inflation would need to ‘stay above the target in a stable manner’. Welcoming the overshoot was meant to underscore the BOJ’s seriousness. The approach was later adopted, to varying degrees, by the US Federal Reserve, and the European Central Bank.