The Bank of Japan will review its long-term monetary policy

by time news

2023-05-02 13:00:18

The Bank of Japan (BoJ) has decided to keep its ultra-lax stance unchanged at the institution’s first meeting under the presidency of Kazuo Uedaafter a decade of Haruhiko Kuroda as governor of the Japanese central bank, which has announced a long-term review of its monetary politics.

With its decision on Friday, the Japanese central bank has left the country’s interest rates unchanged at -0.1%, the same rate it has held since January 2016, when it first entered negative territory in his story.

Likewise, the entity has indicated that it will continue to apply its policy of controlling the public debt yield curve, allowing profitability for Japan’s 10-year bond to fluctuate in a range of around +/- 0.5 percentage points from the target level, while it will continue its large-scale sovereign bond purchases.

With extremely high uncertainties surrounding the economies and financial markets at home and abroad, the Bank will patiently continue easing while responding swiftly to developments in economic activity and prices, as well as conditions. financial”, the institution has assured.

In this way, it has reiterated that it will continue with the policy of quantitative and qualitative monetary easing (QQE) with control of the yield curve, with the objective of reaching the price stability target of 2%.

However, as the main novelty in Ueda’s debut as Japan’s central banker, the institution has announced its intention to carry out “a monetary policy review with a broad perspective” and with an estimated time horizon of between one year and one year. year and a half.

In this regard, the entity recalled that, since the late 1990s, when Japan’s economy fell into deflation, achieving price stability has been a challenge over a long period of 25 years in which the bank of japan It has implemented various monetary easing measures that have interacted with and influenced broad areas of Japanese economic activity, prices, and the financial sector.

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