Japanโs central bank raises interest rates to highest level since 1995
Japanโs central bank has raised interest rates to a three-decade high, citing price pressures stemming from the United States-Israel war on Iran. The Bank of Japan (BOJ) on Tuesday voted 7-1 to hike its benchmark rate to 1 percent, a milestone in the countryโs shift away from de
Japanโs central bank has raised interest rates to a three-decade high, citing price pressures stemming from the United States-Israel war on Iran.
The Bank of Japan (BOJ) on Tuesday voted 7-1 to hike its benchmark rate to 1 percent, a milestone in the countryโs shift away from decades of rock-bottom borrowing costs.
The BOJโs widely expected quarter-point hike lifted the key policy rate to its highest level since 1995, continuing its march away from an ultra-loose monetary policy aimed at reversing Japanโs economic stagnation.
In a statement, the BOJ said that while Japanโs rate of inflation has been on target, rising oil prices have filtered down to transactions among businesses, which could lead to higher prices โacross a wide range of itemsโ.
โAgainst this backdrop, taking into account that medium-to-long-term inflation expectations have also continued to rise, there is a risk of underlying CPI [consumer price index] inflation deviating upward to a level above the price stability target of 2 percent,โ the central bank said.
Japan imported about 95 percent of its crude oil from the Middle East before the start of the war, leaving the worldโs fourth-largest economy vulnerable to spikes inย fuel prices.
Prime Minister Sanae Takaichiโs government has taken a series of measures to keep energy prices under control, including dipping into Japanโs strategic oil reserves and providing subsidies for householdsโ gas and electricity bills.
Japanโs core CPI, which does not include fresh food prices, rose just 1.4 percent in April year-on-year, which the BOJ credited to the governmentโs measures to โreduce the household burden of higher energy pricesโ.

