Bank of Japan ends emergency measures, leaves interest rates low
October 30th, 2009 - 3:34 pm ICT by IANSTokyo, Oct 30 (DPA) Japan’s central bank decided Friday to end its purchases of corporate debt at the end of this year as the world’s central banks begin withdrawing emergency measures taken in the thick of the global financial crisis.
With credit now easier to come by, the Bank of Japan also decided at the end of a one-day meeting to prolong unlimited collateral-backed loans to banks a final time until March 31.
In addition, the Bank of Japan forecast that the world’s second-largest economy would begin expanding at the beginning of the next fiscal year, which begins April 1, and kept its benchmark interest rate unchanged at 0.1 percent.
It promised to keep borrowing rates low while forecasting another year of falling prices.
The announcements came as corporate earnings reports came in better than expected, the unemployment rate fell for the second-straight month, stocks rose and consumer spending increased as Japan struggles to recover from its worst postwar recession.
The Bank of Japan predicted in its twice-yearly report on economic and price developments that Japan would see at least three years of deflation while at the same time experiencing moderate growth.
It forecast growth in Japan’s gross domestic product of 1.2 percent in the coming financial year after an estimated contraction of 3.2 percent this year. In the year beginning April 1, 2011, it expected the expansion to pick up steam with a world economic recovery and 2.1 percent domestic growth.
An enduring recovery in private domestic consumption, however, was not expected until the second half of the next fiscal year, it said.
Deflation would weaken over the next three years, the Bank of Japan said, predicting that it was unlikely that the falling prices would exert a dampening effect of economic activity.
Consumer prices, excluding food, were forecast to sink 1.5 percent this fiscal year, 0.8 percent next fiscal year and 0.4 percent the year after that.
Related Stories
- 'US, Europe job markets to remain weak until 2011' - Nov 19, 2009
- Unemployment expected to rise in 2010 in Italy - Nov 20, 2009
- Europe slides further into deflation in July - Jul 31, 2009
- ADB upgrades forecast for Asia, predicts India growth at 7 percent - Dec 15, 2009
- India's central banks hints at tightening monetary policy - Jan 28, 2010
- German economy records biggest contraction in 60 years - Jan 13, 2010
- US economic rebound smaller than thought, but Fed optimistic - Nov 25, 2009
- German economy shrank 4.8 percent in 2009 - Jan 13, 2010
- European Central Bank predicts economic recovery - Dec 04, 2009
- US central bank issues rosier outlook on economy - Nov 25, 2009
Posted in Business, |






