The Los Angeles Post
U.S. World Business Lifestyle
Today: April 07, 2025
Today: April 07, 2025

Japan's govt to warn of weak yen pain in policy roadmap, draft shows

Illustration picture of Japanese yen coins and banknotes
June 20, 2024
Takaya Yamaguchi - Reuters

By Takaya Yamaguchi

TOKYO (Reuters) - Japan's government will warn of the pain a weak yen may inflict on households in this year's long-term economic policy roadmap, a draft seen by Reuters showed, as policymakers grow increasingly concerned about the currency's declines.

The reference to the weak yen's impact will likely keep the Bank of Japan (BOJ) under pressure to raise interest rates or slow its huge bond buying - moves some markets believe could slow the currency's declines.

"Japan's economy continues to recover moderately, though some sectors, notably consumption, are stalling," the draft of this year's long-term roadmap said.

"At present, the pace of wage rises hasn't caught up with that of inflation," it said.

"Vigilance is required to the impact a weak yen could have on households' purchasing power through rising import prices," according to the draft, seen by Reuters by Tuesday.

On monetary policy, the roadmap called on the BOJ to "sustainably and stably achieve its 2% inflation target while confirming whether a positive wage-inflation cycle is in place," the draft showed.

The language is roughly unchanged from the previous year's roadmap, which called on the BOJ to sustainably and stably achieve its 2% inflation target accompanied by wage increases.

The long-term roadmap, which is crafted each year as a key document highlighting the administration's policy priorities, is expected to be finalised around June 21.

A weak yen has become a headache for Prime Minister Fumio Kishida's administration, which has seen approval ratings slump as the currency's decline pushed up households' cost of living by inflating the price of importing food and fuel.

Japanese authorities spent 9.79 trillion yen intervening in the foreign exchange market to support the yen over the past month, in moves that kept the currency from testing new lows but failing to reverse its downtrend.

BOJ Governor Kazuo Ueda has ruled out using monetary policy to directly influence exchange-rate moves, but signaled the chance of raising rates if the weak yen pushes up inflation more than expected.

Many market players expect the BOJ to raise interest rates from current near-zero levels this year with some expecting such action to happen as early as July.

(Reporting by Takaya Yamaguchi, writing by Leika Kihara; Editing by Sam Holmes)

Related Articles

How Trump's latest tariffs could affect your wallet Japan February household spending dips on cost-of-living pressures Morgan Stanley expects no rate cuts from the Fed this year Trump tariffs pile stress on ailing world economy
Share This

Popular

Asia|Business|Economy|Political|World

China accuses US of unilateralism, protectionism and economic bullying with tariffs

China accuses US of unilateralism, protectionism and economic bullying with tariffs
Asia|Business|Economy|Finance|Political|Stock Markets|US

The Latest: Markets sink as Trump's tariffs roil global trading system

The Latest: Markets sink as Trump's tariffs roil global trading system
Asia|Business|Economy|Finance|Political|Stock Markets

What measures are Asian policymakers taking as market rout deepens?

What measures are Asian policymakers taking as market rout deepens?
Asia|Political|US|World

China says it complains to US about Taiwan delegation's Washington visit

China says it complains to US about Taiwan delegation's Washington visit

Economy

Business|Economy|Europe|Political|World

Ireland sees EU consensus for 'calm, measured' response to Trump tariffs

Ireland sees EU consensus for 'calm, measured' response to Trump tariffs
Americas|Business|Economy|Environment|Finance

Santander, BNDES back Mombak reforestation, drawing on Brazil climate fund

Santander, BNDES back Mombak reforestation, drawing on Brazil climate fund
Economy|Europe|Finance|Political|Stock Markets

European shares plummet to 16-month low on trade war gloom

European shares plummet to 16-month low on trade war gloom
Asia|Business|Economy|Finance|Stock Markets

China sovereign fund Huijin buying domestic stocks as market slumps

China sovereign fund Huijin buying domestic stocks as market slumps

Access this article for free.

Already have an account? Sign In