Monday, April 22, 2013

Bank of Japan to Use Price Forecasts Themselves as Deflation-Fighting Tool?


That's what Bloomberg News says Goldman Sachs and J.P.Morgan Chase are thinking.

(Or should I say "what they are thinking of telling Kuroda to do"?)

So, BOJ Governor Haruhiko Kuroda will simply declare to the public, "Inflation forecast in fiscal 2015 will be such and such", and people will rush to buy up things now, before the price is supposed to rise according to BOJ, thus creating an actual inflation in which more money chases the same number of goods.

This is more farcical than Ben Bernank's antics.

From Bloomberg News (4/22/2013; emphasis is mine):

BOJ Seen Deploying Price Forecasts as Tool Against Deflation

As the Bank of Japan prepares to boost its inflation forecasts this week, analysts from Goldman Sachs Group Inc. to JPMorgan Chase & Co. say the estimates may themselves be used as a tool for ending deflation.

The BOJ may indicate that its 2 percent inflation target will be reached by spring 2015, the Nikkei newspaper reported April 18. The central bank may upgrade its view on core price gains to at least 1.5 percent for the year ending March 2015, people familiar with officials’ discussions previously told Bloomberg News.

Central bank Governor Haruhiko Kuroda, who this week oversees his second board meeting, says stoking inflation expectations can unlock pent-up demand and spur credit growth by alleviating concern real debt burdens will rise. The BOJ risks losing credibility unless prices stop dropping in coming months, with a key gauge showing a 0.3 percent decline in February and analysts estimating another fall in March.

It’s a confidence game,” said Masamichi Adachi, senior economist at JPMorgan in Tokyo and a former BOJ official. “The BOJ is trying to use its inflation forecast to convince markets that they can achieve the 2 percent inflation target in two years, even though some market participants may feel this is unrealistic.

Any forecast for price gains in fiscal 2015 is likely to be 2 percent, matching the central bank’s target, according to five out of six economists in a Bloomberg News survey. The BOJ is yet to indicate whether it will release such a projection.

The highest forecast since the central bank began releasing estimates in 2000 was 1.8 percent for fiscal 2008.

(Full article at the link)


Confidence game. Indeed. As Kuroda has said a number of times, he will do whatever it takes to cause inflation which he calls, along with almost all economists and journalists and politicians in Japan, "price stability". I suppose that can include lying to the public that inflation is coming.

As long as it is for the greater good of actually causing inflation.

Koroda's policies and actions are considered to have been a great success so far by the Japanese public. Financial Times flat-out says it's been a failure.

1 comments:

Anonymous said...

System. Broken. Safe.

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