Bank of Japan raises policy rate to 0.75%

The Bank of Japan decided on December 19 to raise its short-term policy rate target from 0.5% to 0.75%, marking a 30-year high since 1995 and the first increase since January. The move anticipates wage hikes and aims to achieve the 2% inflation target amid elevated inflation and a weak yen.

The Bank of Japan (BOJ) decided on December 19, following a two-day meeting, to raise its short-term policy rate target from the current about 0.5% to about 0.75%. This level is the highest in 30 years since 1995 and marks the first rate increase since January.

The BOJ appears to have concluded that wage increases will be achieved in the 2026 shunto spring wage negotiations, paving the way to its 2% inflation target. However, it had kept the policy rate unchanged for six consecutive policy-setting meetings since the January hike, due to high uncertainty from the U.S. President Donald Trump administration's tariff policy.

Japan's economy faces sustained elevated inflation, a weak yen against the dollar, and falling real wages. The decision was widely expected by economists and analysts. BOJ Governor Kazuo Ueda is scheduled to speak later on Friday to provide more details.

This rate hike symbolizes a turning point for the Japanese economy, signaling a departure from prolonged low-interest policies.

Related Articles

Illustration of Bank of Japan rate hike to 0.75% amid yen depreciation and market unease.
Image generated by AI

Bank of Japan raises rates as yen weakens

Reported by AI Image generated by AI

The Bank of Japan raised its policy rate to 0.75% from 0.5% on December 20, marking a 30-year high aimed at curbing inflation. However, the yen weakened sharply against the dollar and other major currencies. Markets reacted with sales due to the BOJ's vague outlook on future hikes.

Following its December 19-20 policy meeting, the Bank of Japan raised its rate to 0.75%, prompting yen fluctuations, sustained high inflation, bank rate adjustments, and measured government support amid U.S. tariff concerns and shunto wage prospects.

Reported by AI

The Bank of Japan maintained its policy rate at 0.75% on March 19 amid growing Middle East uncertainty. The decision was widely expected by markets and central bank watchers.

Core consumer prices in Tokyo rose 2.3 percent year-on-year in December, slowing from 2.8 percent in November but staying above the Bank of Japan's 2 percent target. The figure fell short of market expectations of 2.5 percent, triggering yen weakness. As a leading indicator for nationwide trends, the data will factor into the BOJ's next policy meeting.

Reported by AI

Japan's 10-year government bond yield reversed course and edged higher on Tuesday following a moderately firm outcome at a same-maturity bond auction. The yield rose 0.5 basis points to 2.12%. Markets remain concerned that the Bank of Japan is lagging in addressing inflation risks, anticipating further rate hikes.

The Japanese government expects its interest payments on outstanding debt to roughly double over the next four years due to the Bank of Japan's gradual rate hikes. Payments are projected at ¥21.6 trillion ($139 billion) in the year starting April 2029, up from the current year's budgeted ¥10.5 trillion.

Reported by AI

At a New Year event in Tokyo, Japanese business leaders expressed optimism about continuing wage increases in this year's spring labor negotiations. Many aim to match or exceed last year's average of 5.39% at major firms. Extending gains to small and midsize companies remains a key challenge.

 

 

 

This website uses cookies

We use cookies for analytics to improve our site. Read our privacy policy for more information.
Decline