TOKYO, May 27 —
The Bank of Japan has begun shifting its focus from supporting growth to ways
of phasing out its massive stimulus, taking first tentative steps towards a potentially momentous move for the world economy.
Current and
former central bankers familiar with internal discussions say an informal
debate is under way on how to prepare for an exit from
the BOJ’s 13-month-old “quantitative and qualitative monetary easing.”
The stimulus is
a centrepiece of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s campaign to end two decades of deflation
and fitful growth, and BOJ Governor Haruhiko Kuroda has vowed to keep cheap
cash flowing until his 2 per cent inflation target
is in plain sight.
But with
inflation now past the half-way mark and signs that the economy has weathered
last month’s sales tax increase, Japanese central bankers are already thinking
about the next chapter.
First of all,
Kuroda and his team are keen to avoid market confusion and volatility that the
US Federal Reserve triggered in May 2013 when it first signalled the possible
“tapering” of its extraordinary stimulus.
With the BOJ
churning out 60-70 trillion yen per year($589-687 billion), withdrawal symptoms
could be similarly acute and the lesson for the BOJ is that signalling a tapering too soon or being too specific could
backfire.
With that in
mind, the BOJ has no plans to trim the stimulus or publicly suggest the
eventual drawdown any time soon, say those familiar with the internal debate.
But whereas
weeks or months ago that debate would centre on the potential need for more
easing, now there is a strong sense within the BOJ board that the stimulus so
far has worked well and the next step, albeit distant, could be policy
tightening, not further easing.
Deputy Governor
Kikuo Iwata underscored that shift, reminding markets that the 2 per cent
inflation goal worked both ways.
“The BOJ’s current policy intends to prevent not just
deflation but inflation from well exceeding 2 per cent, such as to 4 per
cent or 5 per cent, for a medium- to long-term period,” Iwata told a seminar
yesterday.
Hideo Hayakawa,
a former top BOJ economist who maintains close contacts with those inside, says
the central bank needs to clarify what it will do after the battle with
deflation is won.
“If 2 per cent
inflation comes into sight, the BOJ should taper its asset purchases,”
Hayakawa, a senior executive fellow at private think-tank Fujitsu Research
Institute, told a Reuters Investment Summit last week.
In public,
Kuroda has become more vocal about the need for government structural reforms,
which shows he wants the BOJ to shift from boosting economic demand to playing
a supporting role as Abe promises deregulation to boost Japan’s growth
potential.
Mixed views
Keen to shore up
public confidence in the BOJ’s inflation goal, Kuroda regularly brushes off
questions about an exit strategy saying the focus should remain on battling
deflation.
There is no hard
deadline for curtailing asset purchases and Kuroda keeps reminding investors
that the BOJ will not hesitate to ease further if economic recovery appears at
risk.
But central
bankers are now expressing more confidence in their policy and if the economy
keeps improving the debate will intensify about how long the BOJ should
maintain its stimulus after it reaches the two-year
mark in April 2015.
Right now, there
is no agreement yet among the nine policy board members on that.
Some, including
Kuroda and former International Monetary Fund economist Sayuri Shirai, stress
the “open-ended” nature of the policy. They argue the BOJ can keep buying
government bonds and other assets until there is convincing evidence that 2 per
cent inflation will be sustained, say people familiar with the internal debate.
Former market
economist Takahide Kiuchi, however, wants the current framework to be reviewed
next April because he fears loading up on too much debt will make an exit
difficult.
Since the launch
of its extraordinary asset-buying scheme in April 2013, the BOJ has been scooping up about 70 per cent of newly issued
government debt, including nearly all new 10-year benchmark bonds sold by the
government.
Public remarks
and private conversations with some of the central bankers suggest the rest of
the board, including two former business executives, stands somewhere in
between.
According to
central bank insiders, at least two policymakers believe the BOJ should stay “ahead of the curve” and seek the exit once there are
early signs that inflation is approaching 2 per cent.
Such debate may
have been academic when inflation was well below 2 per cent, but will matter
more if prices near the target.
“Bond market
players don’t want to think about an exit and don’t see any need to think about
it yet,” said Noriatsu Tanji, bond strategist at Barclays Securities Japan,
explaining why yields have stayed low despite an improving economy.
“But things may
change if consumer inflation exceeds 1.5 per cent
around autumn of this year,” he said. That will prompt investors to
price in the chance of a future tapering.
Change of heart
The key concern,
for now, is to prevent premature expectations of tapering from disrupting the
bond market, where the government continues to pay 0.6 per cent interest on
10-year bonds despite its heaviest debt load in the industrial world.
BOJ officials do
not want to discuss how long the stimulus may last and what might trigger its
withdrawal, which in part reflects considerable differences within the BOJ on
how to communicate its plans.
Some say the BOJ
should clarify the conditions under which tapering might start, possibly in
October when it updates its twice-yearly economic projections.
“The BOJ may
need to change its message to markets at some point later this year,” said a
person familiar with the bank’s thinking. “The key is
to avoid a spike in bond yields.”
Others worry
that even mentioning a possibility of an exit could jolt markets.
Yet the very
fact such discussions are taking place marks a change for the BOJ and Kuroda,
whose prime concern has long been that the stimulus could be scaled back
prematurely.
Last month, he
surprised markets by saying the BOJ’s massive easing has boosted demand enough
to essentially eliminate any slack in Japan’s economy.
At a news
conference last week followed by interviews with two major business newspapers,
Kuroda went further, stressing that demand has been revived enough and it was
now up to the government to remove supply bottlenecks by bringing more women
into the workforce and making it easier to start new businesses.
Some academics
argue the BOJ is too coy about tapering and should start talking about it now rather
than wait until markets start fretting about a possible exit.
“They should be
talking about tapering at a minimum, and they should begin preparing financial
markets for a regime after 2 per cent, a shift from stimulating aggregate
demand to stimulating aggregate supply,” Harvard economist Dale W. Jorgenson
told the Reuters Summit.
“It’s not too soon to begin managing expectations of changes
that will take place within next 12 months.” — Reuters
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