The world's central banks are trying to curb inflation, which has risen after some Western politicians imposed sanctions on Russia. These central banks will fail until these sanctions are enforced. The Japanese understand this. Much of the current inflationary pressure in the European Union is also caused by a strong dollar and supply problems affecting imports, factors from outside the European Union. So why is the European Union's Central Bank fighting such inflation by raising interest rates and strangling the economy?
"TOKYO — As the Federal Reserve has repeatedly pushed up
American interest rates in an effort to tame rampant inflation, virtually every
major central bank in the world has scrambled to keep up the pace. And then
there’s the Bank of Japan.
The yen is in free fall. Inflation by some measures is the highest
in decades. And conventional wisdom says a rate increase could ease both
problems. But the Bank of Japan — never one to follow the crowd — has remained
steadfastly committed to its ultralow interest rates, arguing that making money
more expensive now would only suppress already weak demand and set back a
fragile economic recovery from the pandemic.
Prime Minister Fumio Kishida voiced strong support this week
for the Bank of Japan’s monetary policy, even as the yen fell to a 32-year low
against the dollar, a plunge that has contributed to price increases in a
country unaccustomed to them and put more pressure on his unpopular
administration.
He offered his backing a day before the Bank of Japan’s
governor, Haruhiko Kuroda, made clear in comments to Parliament that the bank
would not change course anytime soon. All the members of the bank’s policy
board, Mr. Kuroda said, agree that “under the current economic conditions, it’s
appropriate to continue monetary easing.”
His rationale is simple. Japan wants good inflation — the
kind created by lively consumer demand. But it has gotten bad inflation — the
kind created by a strong dollar and supply shortfalls related to the pandemic
and the sanctions on Russia — and that is why the bank should stay the course.
The diverging economic circumstances in the United States
and Japan have led to drastically different monetary policies, a gap that has
helped drive down the yen as investors seek better returns elsewhere.
In the United States — where the economic recovery has been
rapid and wages are rising apace — the Fed is seeking to squash inflation by
throttling demand. It believes it can achieve the goal in part by discouraging
spending through higher interest rates, though some prominent economists have
warned that going too far could be punishing for the economy.
In Japan, however, there is broad agreement that — at least
for now — a rate rise would do more harm than good. The Japanese economy, the
world’s third largest, has barely returned to its prepandemic levels, and wages
have stagnated despite a labor market so tight that unemployment remained below
3 percent during the pandemic’s worst months.
“In order to bring inflation in Japan down, you would have
to slow demand rather sharply, and that’s tricky because demand was already
sort of weak relative to other economies,” said Stefan Angrick, a senior
economist at Moody’s Analytics in Japan.
While inflation pressures in the United States have been
broadly distributed, in Japan they have primarily hit essentials like food and
energy, for which demand is satisfied largely through imports.
Inflation in Japan (excluding volatile fresh food prices)
has reached 3 percent, the government reported on Friday, the highest since
1991, excluding a brief spike related to a 2014 tax increase. But stripped of
food and energy, Japanese prices in September were just 1.8 percent higher over
the last year. In the United States, that number was 6.6 percent.
The reasons for the low Japanese figure are diverse and not
well understood. Experts have found explanations in stagnant wages and the
deleterious effects on demand from an aging, shrinking population.
Perhaps the largest contributor, however, is a public grown
used to stable prices. Producer prices — a measure of inflation for companies’
goods and services — have climbed nearly 10 percent over the last year. But
Japanese companies, unlike their American counterparts, have been reluctant to
pass on those additional costs to consumers.
That means much of the current inflation pressure is coming
from the strong dollar and supply issues affecting imports — factors outside
Japan and therefore outside the Bank of Japan’s control. Under those
circumstances, bank officials “know full well that driving up interest rates is
not going to attenuate those price pressures — it’s just going to push up
business costs,” said Bill Mitchell, a professor of economics at the University
of Newcastle in Australia.
The Bank of Japan introduced its current monetary easing
policy in 2013, when the prime minister at the time, Shinzo Abe, pledged strong
measures to stimulate economic growth that had stagnated for decades.
The plan included unleashing a torrent of government
spending and reshaping the structure of Japan’s economy through initiatives
like encouraging more women to join the work force.
But the most important element was making money cheap and
readily available, a goal the Bank of Japan achieved by bottoming out interest
rates and vacuuming up bonds and equities. Mr. Kuroda pledged that it would
maintain those policies until inflation — which had been nearly nonexistent —
reached 2 percent, a level economists believed was necessary to lift wages and
expand the country’s anemic economy.
Nearly a decade later, Japan’s longtime commitment to using
ultralow rates to stimulate growth has made its economy particularly vulnerable
to the damage that rate increases can cause.
Between 2014 and 2022, according to data from the Japan
Housing Finance Agency, the share of variable-rate mortgages rose to 73.9
percent from 39.3 percent as home buyers, convinced that rates would not go up,
piled into the riskier, but cheaper, financial products. A change in lending
rates would increase payment costs, crimping already tight household budgets.
A rate increase could also make it more difficult for Japan
to service its own gargantuan debt, which in 2021 stood at almost 260 percent
of annual economic output. The debt concerns have become even more salient as
the government has provided enormous fiscal support to businesses and
households to counteract the economic damage from recent world events. While
disagreement exists over whether Japan’s debt is sustainable, no one wants to
risk finding out.
“Fiscal policy and monetary policy are joined at the hip,
and that’s what’s making it so difficult for the Bank of Japan to make a move,”
said Saori Katada, an expert on Japanese financial policy at the University of
Southern California. She added that policymakers feared that a wrong move could
unleash a “doomsday scenario.”
The weak yen has presented a difficult messaging problem for
the Japanese government.
The currency’s depreciation has contributed to tidy profits
for export-heavy companies like Toyota, whose products have become cheaper for
consumers overseas. Mr. Kishida has also said he expects the cheap yen to draw
international tourists, who started to return this month after a nearly
three-year absence caused by Japan’s tough pandemic border restrictions.
But the currency’s weakness has been a drag on the finances
of households and smaller businesses and could have a damaging effect on public
sentiment, said Gene Park, a professor of political science at Loyola Marymount
University in Los Angeles who studies Japan’s monetary policy.
The Bank of Japan has said the effect of the weak yen is
mainly positive. But on Wednesday, Mr. Kuroda told a parliamentary budget
committee that the rapid depreciation had become a “minus.” Japan’s finance
minister, Shunichi Suzuki, on Thursday called the fall’s speed “undesirable” and
pledged “appropriate” action.
In September, the Finance Ministry conducted a one-time
yen-buying operation, its first in over two decades, but the effort did nothing
to stop the currency’s slide. This week, investors were looking for signs of a
smaller “stealth” intervention by the government to prop up the yen. A sudden
move higher by the yen on Friday raised speculation that Japan had in fact
intervened.
It’s unclear whether raising interest rates would even
arrest the yen’s plunge. Rate increases by other central banks have done little
to protect their own currencies against the muscular dollar. And the political
perils of sudden economic moves were made clear this week when Liz Truss
stepped down as Britain’s prime minister six weeks into the job.
Still, some speculators have bet that the Bank of Japan will
fold under the gathering pressure and raise rates.
The bank is unlikely to flinch, Professor Mitchell said.
“They’re sort of impervious to Western ideological
pressure,” he said, adding, “They have worked out, sensibly, that the best
strategy at the moment is what they’re doing: Hold the fort.”"
Komentarų nėra:
Rašyti komentarą