Monetary Policy Is Expected To Support Japan’s Economy

 | Sep 04, 2016 04:46AM ET

Economic Commentary

September 21 is shaping up to be a big day for central banks. Both the US Federal Reserve (Fed) and the Bank of Japan (BoJ) are making monetary policy decisions on that date. The probability of a Fed rate hike has been rising with markets currently attaching a probability of 34% for a September rate hike, up from near 0% at the end of June. In contrast, the BoJ may ease monetary policy as activity has slowed and inflation has fallen. Whether the divergence in monetary policy will begin in September or not is up for debate. What is more certain is that,going forward, the monetary policies of these two major economies are likely to move in opposing directions.

Japan was mired in a deflationary cycle for two decades, but since late 2012,the incoming prime minster, Shinzo Abe, began his new economic policy to improve growth, fix public finances and overcome deflation. The initial outcomes of ‘Abenomics’ were promising. However, the Japanese economy seems to have stalled more recently. GDP growth was 0.2% in Q2 and headline year-on-year inflation was negative (-0.4%) in July. Low inflation seems to be a persistent issue in Japan rather than an outcome of temporary factors such as falling international prices of food and oil. Excluding food and energy, inflation was only 0.3% in July.

One of the main reasons behind the recent disappointing performance of the economy is the sharp appreciation of the Japanese yen which has strengthened by around 17% against the US dollar so far this year. Exports play a large role in the Japanese economy so a stronger yen tends to erode competitiveness and weaken growth. Additionally, the stronger yen makes imports cheaper, reinforcing the deflationary cycle.