Veteran ruling party lawmaker Amari warns BOJ against raising rates

Reuters

Published Feb 08, 2023 06:53AM ET

TOKYO (Reuters) - Japan has yet to see economic conditions fall into place for the central bank to raise interest rates, Akira Amari, a veteran ruling party lawmaker, told Reuters on Wednesday.

"Basically, Japan's economy isn't in a condition where the Bank of Japan (BOJ) can exit" ultra-loose monetary policy, said Amari, a former industry minister who played a key role in designing former premier Shinzo Abe's "Abenomics" stimulus policies.

"When stripping away the effect of one-off factors like energy and fresh food, we're not seeing inflation stably move up around 2%," Amari said, adding that raising interest rates now would hurt the country's still fragile economy.

Amari also said there was no need to amend the current policy statement signed between the government and the BOJ, under which the central bank pledges to achieve 2% inflation at the earliest date possible.

"There are some people who say it's sufficient to target 1% inflation because 2% inflation cannot be achieved. But 2% inflation is a global standard. In the global world of central banking, inflation target means targeting 2%," Amari said.

Amari's comments came as Prime Minister Fumio Kishida's administration intensifies its search for a new BOJ governor to succeed incumbent Haruhiko Kuroda, whose second, five-year term ends in April.