For Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda, Sunday’s general election
has brought into focus the challenge of unwinding a massive stimulus
programme and yield curve control policy, while not hurting a budding
but still fragile economy, the world’s third-largest.
The
next step would be to allow long-term interest rates, which the BOJ has
capped at around zero, to rise, more reflecting improvements in the
economy, the sources say. The bank could raise the bond yield target or
shift it to the shorter end of the curve even before inflation hits 2
percent, as it can maintain easy monetary conditions with its strong
balance sheet.
With inflation far below a 2 percent target, the BOJ rules out any near-term exit from Kuroda’s legacy ultra-easy policy.
But
there’s growing alarm within the central bank about how long it can
keep the money spigot open, given the rising costs and diminishing
returns, people familiar with BOJ thinking say.
Most
of the BOJ’s nine board members and bureaucrats involved in drafting
monetary policy feel the next step - though some way off - would be to
roll back Kuroda’s radical monetary experiment, with the economy in
recovery-mode, they say.
The political tide is shifting in favour of at least having such a debate.
Several
ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) heavyweights have warned of the
rising cost of prolonged monetary easing. Opposition parties, including
the new Party of Hope led by popular Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike, want a
departure from over-reliance on monetary policy.
BOJ bureaucrats
are drafting a plan. The trick is to retreat from crisis-mode stimulus
without giving the impression the bank is embarking on outright monetary
tightening.
Already, the BOJ is proceeding
with the first stage of the plan - by whittling down its vast bond
purchases to an annual pace of around 50 trillion yen ($443 billion),
below a loose pledge to keep it at around 80 trillion yen.

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