Finance & economics | Yielding results

Has Japan truly escaped low inflation?

Its central bankers are increasingly hopeful

Pedestrians are reflected on a curved mirror next to Japan’s national flag in a shopping district in Tokyo, Japan.
Photograph: Reuters
|Singapore

Japan is used to the position in which it currently finds itself: apart from the rest of the rich world. Elsewhere, as inflation exceeded central-bank targets, rate-setters tightened monetary policy in rough proportion to the size of their overshoot. If the Bank of Japan had behaved in a similar manner to its G10 peers, notes Tim Baker of Deutsche Bank, the country’s interest rates would have increased by two percentage points over the past few years. Instead, they barely crept up, rising from -0.1% to 0.25%, despite nearly three years of price growth above the BoJ’s target of 2%.

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This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline “Yielding results”

From the January 25th 2025 edition

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