Hopes for new leader to pressure Bank of Japan
Topics: From the Wires, News
Cars for export park at a port in Kawasaki, west of Tokyo, Thursday, Dec. 20, 2012. Japan is reporting its fifth straight month of trade deficits for November, marking a lengthy span of lagging exports that highlights a struggling economy. The Finance Ministry released data Wednesday, Dec. 19, showing the trade deficit soared nearly 38 percent last month compared to November the previous year. (AP Photo/Koji Sasahara)(Credit: AP)TOKYO (AP) — Hopes are high in Japan Inc. for the new prime minister. Stocks are recovering. The central bank is set to supercharge an already loose monetary policy. The soaring yen, a big minus for exporters, is reversing course.
The bullish mood in the air is all about “Abenomics” — a reference, as dubbed by experts and market players, to Shinzo Abe, the shoo-in comeback prime minister when Parliament votes next week.
But experts are already wondering how long that celebration is going to last.
“This is just the honeymoon,” said Masaaki Kanno, chief economist at J.P. Morgan in Tokyo.
Abe has made reviving the economy a priority, and is pushing for a 2 percent inflation “target,” double the central bank’s “goal” now.
That’s designed to fight a problem that was until recently relatively unique in the world — deflation, or continually dropping prices, which deadens economic activity. The Japanese economy has been stuck in deflation for two decades.
The Bank of Japan, ending a two-day policy board meeting Thursday, further loosened its super-easy monetary policy, pumping more money into the financial system by expanding its asset purchase program by about 10 trillion yen ($119 billion) for a total of 101 trillion yen ($1.2 billion).
The bank has now eased monetary policy five times this year. Japan’s benchmark interest rates are already at zero.
The central bank also paid respect to Abe. It said it will consider pricing goals and report back at the next meeting in January.
Abe’s pro-business, conservative Liberal Democratic Party was voted back into power in a landslide in Sunday’s elections.
Before a change of power in 2009, the party ruled virtually without interruption for a half-century, engineering Japan’s stellar growth into the world’s third-largest economy.
Besides generous promises to boost public-works spending — by as much as 10 trillion yen ($119 billion), according to party officials — Abe is pressuring the central bank to work more closely with the government.
Such pressures are a departure from the past. But they are also growing in other parts of the world, including in the U.S. and parts of Europe.
What remains unclear is exactly how the 2 percent inflation target will be achieved. A weakening yen, though favorable for Japanese businesses, is likely not enough to get a lagging economy back on course.




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