Bank of Japan is not undertaking Fed-like tapering, says Governor

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
TOKYO: Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda said a slowdown in the central bank’s bond buying is different in nature from the US Federal
Reserve’s tapering of asset purchases, signalling that Japan is nowhere near an exit from ultraloose monetary policy. But Kuroda also said
the BOJ would need to shrink the size of its balance sheet once inflation accelerates, suggesting that the central bank won’t maintain its
massive stimulus indefinitely. “The Fed’s tapering is conducted intentionally and in several stages, as part of a normalisation of
monetary policy,” Kuroda told parliament on Thursday. “The slowdown in our government bond buying is different from the Fed’s
tapering,” he added. Since reverting to a policy targeting interest rates, the BOJ has steadily slowed its government bond purchases to
half the level it loosely commits to buy each year. Some analysts describe the slowdown as the BOJ’s “stealth tapering,” or an
intentional attempt by the central bank to whittle down a huge bond buying programme that critics see as unsustainable. Subdued inflation
has forced the BOJ to maintain a huge stimulus programme despite the rising costs, such as the pain inflicted on bank profites by years of
near-zero interest rates. In a meeting with business leaders in central Japan earlier this month, Kuroda said Japan is “no longer in a
situation where decisive, large-scale policy is needed to overcome deflation.” Some market players interpreted the remark as suggesting
the BOJ could backtrack on its pledge to hit its 2 percent inflation target. Kuroda rebuffed such a view, saying that while no additional
easing was needed now, it was important for the BOJ to patiently maintain the current stimulus programme. “Japan’s economy is clearly
improving but it’s taking some time to achieve 2% inflation,” Kuroda said. “It’s a somewhat complicated situation so we need to
carefully weigh the merits and costs of our policy.”