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REPEAT: MNI: Japan Diet Approves BOJ Kuroda 2nd Term, Deputies

Repeats Story Initially Transmitted at 06:34 GMT Mar 16/02:34 EST Mar 16
     TOKYO (MNI) - Japanese parliament approved on Friday in a majority vote the
government nomination of Haruhiko Kuroda for a second five-year term as Bank of
Japan governor.
     The Diet also approved the government nominees for the two deputy governors
-- Masayoshi Amamiya, executive director in charge of monetary policy at the
BOJ, and Masazumi Wakatabe, an economics professor at Waseda University.
     Following approval by the Upper House earlier on Friday, a majority 'yes'
vote at the Lower House finalized the parliamentary process of endorsing the
incoming top BOJ policymakers.
     Given the ruling coalition's majority in both houses, the BOJ appointments
were expected to win Diet approval easily.
     However, new revelations about the year-long political scandal, which
indicated ruling party politicians might have tried to influence a questionable
state land sale, promoted opposition boycott, raising fears that plenary-session
approval at each house might be delayed and cause temporary vacancies on the BOJ
board.
     Kuroda's current five-year term ends on April 8 while Amamiya and Wakatabe
will replace Hiroshi Nakaso and Kikuo Iwata, whose five-year terms end on
Monday.
     The new deputy governors are expected to hold a joint news conference late
on Tuesday.
     At a news conference last week after the latest BOJ policy meeting, Kuroda
repeated his recent remarks that the central bank is "not at a stage to consider
the specifics of an exit" from large-scale monetary easing because "there is
still some distance" toward the bank's 2% inflation target.
     Amamiya, 62, is a career central banker. He has been responsible for
drafting many of the bank's monetary policy measures, including the policies on
quantitative and quality easing and negative interest rates.
     Amamiya told a parliamentary committee last week that BOJ officials "are
discussing what exit options the BOJ has and how they should be used" in
preparation for the eventual unwinding of large-scale monetary easing.
     Wakatabe, 52, is a reflationist who has advocated bold monetary easing to
overcome deflation. He told lawmakers last week that he would like to assess
whether the current easy policy is enough to achieve the 2% price target and
that he would propose to conduct additional easing if necessary.
     Both Amamiya and Wakatabe said the benefits of aggressive easing are bigger
than its costs.
--MNI Tokyo Bureau; tel: +81 90-4670-5309; email: max.sato@marketnews.com

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