BOJ's Kuroda warns of uneven global recovery from pandemic

Reuters

Published May 24, 2021 07:30AM ET

Updated May 24, 2021 08:07AM ET

By Leika Kihara

TOKYO (Reuters) -Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda on Monday said the unevenness of the world's recovery from a coronavirus-triggered recession could lead to an increase in savings, economic inequality and indebtedness.

"The trio of increased savings, inequality and debt is considered to be intertwined in practice and may theoretically reduce the natural interest rate," Kuroda said in a speech to a BOJ-hosted academic conference.

As the global economy emerges from the pandemic's initial hit, the role of central banks will shift from providing liquidity support to helping companies stay solvent, he said.

"The nature of the policy responses will ... shift from temporary first aid measures to medium- to long-term structural policies," Kuroda said. "In this sense, we are seeing a widening in the scope of issues that central banks should take into account."

Some central banks are seeking to withdraw crisis-mode policies as global growth rebounds from last year's slump and inflation ticks up.

Others, including the BOJ, have pledged to keep monetary policy ultra-loose as their countries struggle with resurgent infection rates.

Kuroda said the uneven nature of the global recovery could aggravate inequality which, together with "increasing worldwide concern" over climate change, provide fresh challenges to policymakers.