Business

Bank of Japan ends era of negative interest rates

Unlock the Editor’s Digest for free

The Bank of Japan has ended an era of negative interest rates, raising borrowing costs for the first time since 2007 in a historic shift as the country puts decades of deflation behind it.

Kazuo Ueda, the BoJ governor, brought an end to more than a decade of ultra-loose monetary policy, abandoning a swath of easing measures that were put in place to stimulate Asia’s most advanced economy.

Following a 7-2 majority vote the BoJ said it would guide the overnight interest rate to remain in a range of about zero to 0.1 per cent, making it the last central bank to end the use of negative rates as a monetary policy tool. Its benchmark rate was previously minus-0.1 per cent.

The BoJ turned to negative interest rates in 2016 as it tried to encourage banks to lend more in order to generate spending and contain the risks of a global economic slowdown.

Tuesday’s policy changes come as signs emerge of broader change in the Japanese economy.

Workers at some of Japan’s largest companies have secured their biggest pay rise since 1991, giving Ueda enough confidence that mild inflation will continue — a goal that has been central to the bank’s policies for years.

More companies are also passing on inflation costs to consumers and labour shortages are contributing to higher wages.

Investors have also grown more confident in the economy’s prospects. In February the Nikkei 225 stock index finally surpassed the level reached 34 years ago.

You are seeing a snapshot of an interactive graphic. This is most likely due to being offline or JavaScript being disabled in your browser.

Despite the return to positive interest rates, BoJ officials do not see the first increase as a signal that more will quickly follow.

Inflation, which was sparked by a rise in imported energy and food prices, is well beyond its peak. Core inflation, which excludes volatile fresh food prices, slowed in January for the third straight month.

“Given the current outlook for economic activity and prices, the bank anticipates that accommodative financial conditions will be maintained for the time being,” the BoJ said.

On Tuesday the central bank also removed its yield curve controls, another policy put in place in 2016 to reinforce its massive monetary easing measures by capping the yields of 10-year Japanese government bonds.

The BoJ said it would maintain its policy of buying about ¥6tn ($40bn) a month in Japanese government bonds, a pledge that underscores continuing weakness in the economy as household consumption remains sluggish.

But it will discontinue purchases of exchange traded funds and Japanese real estate investment trusts.

As part of the new framework, the BoJ will apply an interest rate of 0.1 per cent to deposits held with the central bank, removing a complicated three-tier system of borrowing costs that was adopted to limit the negative rate policy’s hit to commercial banks’ earnings.

While the end to negative interests rates was widely expected, economists had been divided on how far the BoJ would go in scrapping other measures such as yield curve control and ETF purchases.

Sayuri Shirai, a former BoJ board member who opposed the introduction of negative interest rates in 2016, said that because economic conditions were not yet in place for additional rate increases, the BoJ appeared to have decided it only had one chance to act.

“We have to give credit to Mr Ueda for his resolve and boldness. Instead of doing it gradually, he just quit everything altogether and that also likely means that this is it,” she said.

Ueda’s decision sparked opposition from two BoJ board members, with one arguing that it should have avoided removing both negative interest rates and yield curve controls until the “virtuous cycle” between wages and prices had become more solid.

The yen edged higher after the announcement but was down against the US dollar on Tuesday at ¥150.28. The Nikkei 225 stock index rose 0.5 per cent.

Additional reporting by William Sandlund in Hong Kong


Source link

Related Articles

Back to top button