BoJ Eyes Gradual Policy Shift Amid Risks

2026-03-30 02:57 By Farida Husna 1 min. read

Further policy rate hikes in Japan remain appropriate as economic activity and prices improve, with monetary accommodation to be reduced gradually if the outlook holds.

The Bank of Japan’s March Summary of Opinions noted that despite earlier increases, financial conditions remain loose, and investment pullbacks have largely reflected labor shortages and rising material costs rather than higher rates.

Still, uncertainty from the Middle East has weighed on sentiment, prompting the board to keep rates steady at its latest meeting.

Future tightening will hinge on wages, inflation, financial conditions, and geopolitical risks.

Policymakers will assess whether accommodative conditions persist and how broadly wage gains and “beginning-of-period price hikes” spread.

While external risks may lift prices and dampen growth, inflation is expected to trend higher.

Policymakers emphasized the need to adjust policy without delay if conditions hold, while avoiding sustained inflation above 2%.



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BoJ Eyes Gradual Policy Shift Amid Risks
Further policy rate hikes in Japan remain appropriate as economic activity and prices improve, with monetary accommodation to be reduced gradually if the outlook holds. The Bank of Japan’s March Summary of Opinions noted that despite earlier increases, financial conditions remain loose, and investment pullbacks have largely reflected labor shortages and rising material costs rather than higher rates. Still, uncertainty from the Middle East has weighed on sentiment, prompting the board to keep rates steady at its latest meeting. Future tightening will hinge on wages, inflation, financial conditions, and geopolitical risks. Policymakers will assess whether accommodative conditions persist and how broadly wage gains and “beginning-of-period price hikes” spread. While external risks may lift prices and dampen growth, inflation is expected to trend higher. Policymakers emphasized the need to adjust policy without delay if conditions hold, while avoiding sustained inflation above 2%.
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BoJ Holds Rates Amid Rising Middle East Risks
The Bank of Japan left its key short-term rate unchanged at 0.75% at its March 2026 meeting, keeping borrowing costs at their highest since September 1995. The move, announced hours after the U.S. Fed maintained rates steady, reinforced a cautious global stance. Thursday's decision was widely expected and passed by an 8–1 vote, with Hajime Takata dissenting in favor of a hike to 1%. Policymakers held views that Japan’s economy is recovering moderately but warned that escalating Middle East tensions cloud the outlook. The board signaled it will continue raising rates and adjusting monetary support if growth and inflation unfold as projected, noting real rates remain significantly low. Meanwhile, CPI inflation is expected to dip below 2% temporarily before facing renewed upward pressure from rising crude oil prices. Officials stressed the need to closely monitor geopolitical risks, energy markets, and global economic trends given their impact on Japan’s recovery and inflation path.
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Monetary policy in Japan is nearing a long-awaited exit from years of large-scale easing, Bank of Japan board member Hajime Takata said in a speech on Wednesday. He called it a “true dawn” as the central bank gradually shifts gears. Takata noted firms’ behavior has turned more positive, while financial conditions remain accommodative, and deeply negative real interest rates have spurred corporate lending across industries. He argued for further gradual rate hikes, guided by overseas developments and a broad range of domestic data, rather than rushing to a neutral rate. However, he warned that external shocks could push inflation higher than expected. In January, Takata dissented from an 8-1 decision to hold rates at 0.75%, proposing a hike to 1.0%, and noted that concerns over U.S. tariffs have since eased.
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