Economic news

Japan Denies Pressuring BOJ to Keep Interest Rates Low

TOKYO, July 7 (Reuters) - Japan's government on Tuesday pushed back against market views it was watering down its commitment to fiscal ​reform and pressuring the central bank to keep rates low, as concerns over ‌its expansionary policy push bond yields to multi-decade highs.

In a draft economic blueprint released last month, the government called on the Bank of Japan to align monetary policy with government efforts to boost growth and removed ​language pledging to improve Japan's fiscal health.

The yield on the 10-year Japanese government ​bond (JGB) rose to a 30-year high of 2.83% on Monday as the ⁠draft stoked fears the administration's big spending plans and preference for low rates could worsen ​Japan's finances and delay BOJ rate hikes.

Economy Minister Minoru Kiuchi, who oversees the compilation of ​the blueprint, said market perception that the blueprint intended to keep BOJ rate hikes in check was a misunderstanding.

"There is no change to the government's stance that specific monetary policy means fall under the jurisdiction of ​the BOJ," Kiuchi told a press conference on Tuesday.

He also said the government had ​no intention of resorting to reckless spending, adding that the draft blueprint's language did not signal a retreat ‌from ⁠fiscal discipline.

Kiuchi said he had no plans for now to tweak the language on fiscal and monetary policy. The draft blueprint is expected to be finalised at a cabinet meeting later this month.

In the draft of Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi's first economic blueprint, the government said ​it would no longer ​set annual targets ⁠for achieving a primary budget surplus, instead positioning it as an indicator managed over multiple years.

The government's main fiscal target will be changed ​to Japan's debt-to-GDP ratio, which is less affected by the size ​of borrowing as ⁠long as the economy keeps growing.

Since taking office in October, Takaichi has pledged to pursue a "responsible, proactive fiscal policy" that focuses on addressing what she describes as decades of under-investment that ⁠eroded Japan's ​economy and global competitiveness.

The focus on big spending and ​a lack of clarity on funding have pushed up bond yields as investors fret about the impact on Japan's ​already tattered finances.

Reporting by Yoshifumi Takemoto and Leika Kihara; Editing by Christian Schmollinger and Jacqueline Wong

Source: Reuters


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