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UPDATE: BOJ Sakurai: Far From 2% Goal; Maintain Easy Policy

--Adds Details From 10th Paragraph
     HAKODATE, Japan (MNI) - Bank of Japan board member Makoto Sakurai said
Wednesday that Japan is still far from achieving its 2% consumer price target,
which the BOJ must take seriously, and so it is vital for the central bank to
maintain its current highly accommodative monetary policy.
     In a speech to business leaders in Hakodate City, northern Japan, Sakurai
said, "Price moves remain weak and there is a long way to go to achieve the 2%
price target and we need to take that fact seriously."
     However, Sakurai played down any imminent need of additional easing,
saying, "The economy is improving steadily and the process of moving toward the
target is improving steadily. It is vital to continue to pursue the aggressive
easing policy under the current policy framework."
     Sakurai, seen as a strong supporter of the government's reflationary
policy, including the easy monetary policy championed by BOJ Governor Haruhiko
Kuroda, also said that the central bank should stick to its 2% price target,
judging from external and internal conditions.
     At the latest policy-setting meeting on Sept. 20-21, the BOJ board decided
in an 8-to1 vote to maintain its current monetary policy stance under the yield
curve control framework it adopted about a year ago.
     One of the two new board members, Goushi Kataoka, dissented, arguing
current policy was insufficient to meet the central bank's 2% policy goal by the
current target date of sometime in fiscal 2019, according to the BOJ's policy
statement following its meeting.
     Kataoka was quoted as citing "an excess supply capacity in capital stock
and the labor market" as the reason for his objection but the statement didn't
show any counter-proposals made by him.
     In July, the BOJ pushed back the timeframe for hitting the 2% inflation
target to "around fiscal 2019" from the previous estimate of "around fiscal
2018." It was the sixth delay since the bank began aggressive easing in April
2013.
     Kataoka also opposed the description of the board's inflation outlook.
     As for the 2% target that Japan hasn't achieved, Sakurai said, "I think we
should not change the target easily."
     He elaborated that Japan needs to keep consumer prices in positive
territory as consumer prices have an upward bias and BOJ's tools to fight
deflation are relatively limited as it is difficult for the BOJ to lower nominal
interest rates far below zero.
     Sakurai also said that a 2% stability target is a global standard.
     "Aimed at achieving a 2% price target along with central banks in [other]
industrialized nations would contribute to stabilizing foreign exchange rates
and eventually Japan's consumer prices," Sakurai said.
     Japan's core consumer price index (excluding fresh food but including
energy item) was up 0.7% on year in August and core-core CPI (excluding both
fresh food and energy items) was up 0.2% on year in August, both far below the
BOJ's target.
     Despite continued weak CPI moves, Sakurai was optimistic on the outlook for
the inflation rate.
     He noted that the economy's output gap, a key factor for determining CPI,
is improving steadily and has had positive impact on sentiment.
     Sakurai also said, "The improvement of wage hikes is lagging the steady
recovery of the economy" as firms remain cautious about raising wages for
regular workers.
     However, "looking ahead, Japan's economy is expected to expand moderately.
Upward pressure on wages will likely increase further in response to a further
tightness of labor market conditions."
     Sakurai argued that corporate efforts to increase their productivity is
behind the slow rise in wages.
     Sakurai said he believes that corporate efforts to cope with labor
shortages by business streamlining and worker-saving capital investment would
face  limits, forcing them to consider higher wages, although it is difficult to
identify when these limits would be reached. 
     He added that if corporate price-raising activity expands on the back of
solid private consumption, consumers would accept higher prices, which in turn
would enable firms to raise their prices further.
     Raising the long-term economic growth caused by higher productivity would
increase national interest rates, which would strengthen the effect of the BOJ's
easy policy.
     "We should not be overly negative about the recent slow rises in wages and
prices, as Japan's economy is a process of implementing structural reforms,"
Sakurai said.
     "Personally, I think the economy is growing based on balanced supply and
demand, and both wages and prices are moving steadily in the right direction,"
he added. 
     "The important issue for Japan is not to suppress the current favorable
moves. The BOJ needs to pursue its powerful easy policy, and the government and
private firms should continue to implement necessary measures that will
accelerate structural reform and strengthen economic growth," Sakurai said.
--MNI Tokyo Bureau; tel: +81 90-2175-0040; email: hiroshi.inoue@marketnews.com
--MNI BEIJING Bureau; +1 202-371-2121; email: john.carter@mni-news.com
[TOPICS: MMJBJ$,M$A$$$,M$J$$$]

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