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MNI POLICY: BOJ Harada: Tax Hike Worry; Won't Hesitate to Act

MNI (London)
     NAGASAKI, Japan (MNI) - Bank of Japan board member Yutaka Harada on
Wednesday warned that the consumption tax hike planned for October could push
the economy into recession.
     "If the economy deteriorates to the extent that achieving the 2% price
stability target in the long term becomes difficult, I view it as necessary to
strengthen monetary easing without delay," Harada told business leaders in
Nagasaki City.
     However, Harada didn't elaborate on how the BOJ would strengthen policy.
     Harada emphasized the importance of achieving the 2% price target and also
brushed off the call for normalization of the easy policy. 
     The BOJ board at the April 24-25 policy meeting decided to clarify its
stance of maintaining the current power easy policy, saying the BOJ will keep
extremely low interest rates "at least through around spring 2020."
     On forward guidance, board member Harada, a former government economist,
dissented, arguing that it was appropriate to further clarify its relationship
with the price stability target.
     Other key points from Harada's speech:
     --"Domestic demand such as business fixed investment and consumption has
withstood the decline in external demand and production. However, it also is
true that downside risks to the economy are increasing. The impact of the
consumption tax hike scheduled for October this year also is a concern."
     --The provision of free education and a reduction in mobile phone-related
prices will delay the timing of achieving the 2% price target. But Harada said,
"I am not too pessimistic."
     --They will increase people's real income. "It likely will take time for an
increase in real income to induce an increase in actual demand but this will not
hamper the achievement of the 2% price stability target itself."
     --"Aiming at achieving zero percent inflation entails the risk of actually
aiming for deflation, given the upward bias of the CPI."
     --"The equilibrium interest rates - which are achieved in the long run -
tend to be lower on a nominal basis when the aim is zero percent inflation. That
being the case, there will be virtually no room for lowering interest rates
should the economy fall into recession."
     --The 2% price target is the global standard. "Given that other major
countries aim at achieving 2% inflation, if Japan were they only country with a
lower target, this would result in an appreciation of the yen, which would
create turmoil in firms' investment plans. If Japan maintains the same inflation
rate as other countries, I feel that this will serve to stabilizing foreign
exchange over the long term."
     --"The buffer theory should be interpreted as raising interest rates after
confirming that price increases have gained enough momentum."
     --Terminating the zero rate policy in 2000 and the quantitative easing in
2006 was a "major failure." "If interest rates were raised immediately in Japan
now, the spread between short- and long-term interest rates likely would be
reversed."
     --"I think that deterioration in banks' profitability actually is caused by
the structural problem that they are accumulating deposits despite there being
no borrowers."
--MNI Tokyo Bureau; tel: +81 90-2175-0040; email: hiroshi.inoue@marketnews.com
--MNI London Bureau; tel: +44 203-586-2225; email: les.commons@marketnews.com
[TOPICS: MMJBJ$,M$A$$$,M$J$$$,MT$$$$]
MNI London Bureau | +44 203-865-3812 | les.commons@marketnews.com
MNI London Bureau | +44 203-865-3812 | les.commons@marketnews.com

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