Economic news

IMF Urges Japan to Raise Rates, Keep Fiscal Stimulus Targeted

WASHINGTON, April 16 (Reuters) - Japan should gradually raise interest rates and keep any fiscal stimulus targeted given ​robust domestic demand and steady wage gains, a ‌senior International Monetary Fund official said on Thursday.

The remark came ahead of the Bank of Japan's policy meeting later this month ​where the board will scrutinize the balance between ​economic headwinds and inflationary pressure from the Middle ⁠East war, in deciding whether to raise interest ​rates.

"Growth has held up quite well in Japan," with domestic ​demand strong, wage growth turning positive and annual wage talks delivering robust pay hikes, Krishna Srinivasan, director for the IMF's Asia ​Pacific Department, told a news conference.

"Our advice to the ​BOJ is ... to be data dependent and gradually start increasing rates ‌going ⁠forward," he said, adding that inflation is seen converging to the BOJ's 2% target by 2027.

On fiscal policy, Srinivasan urged Japan to provide targeted support and use ​fiscal buffers "wisely."

Japan has ​deployed subsidies ⁠to curb gasoline and utility bills, as part of efforts to cushion the blow ​to households from rising living costs - a ​move ⁠that adds to the country's already huge debt pile.

An advocate of expansionary fiscal and monetary policies, Prime Minister Sanae ⁠Takaichi ​has proposed ramping up spending to ​boost economic growth and voiced reservations in the past over the ​BOJ's rate-hike plans.

Reporting by Leika Kihara; Editing by Andrea Ricci

Source: Reuters


To leave a comment you must or Join us


More news


Back to economic news list

By visiting our website and services, you agree to the conditions of use of cookies. Learn more
I agree