By Leika Kihara
TOKYO, April 4 (Reuters) – The International Monetary Fund urged the Bank of Japan to continue raising interest rates, even as the Middle East war posed “significant new risks” โto the country’s economic outlook.
The proposal comes amid market expectations the BOJ will raise interest โrates as soon as April in the face of mounting inflationary pressure from the conflict-induced spike in oil prices, and higher โimport costs blamed on the weak yen.
While growth is expected to moderate, due partly to the Iran war, gradual wage gains will underpin consumption, the IMF said in a statement issued from Washington on Friday after the conclusion of its policy consultation with Japan.
“Risks to the outlook and inflation are broadly balanced” with โinflation expected to converge to the โ BOJ’s 2% target in 2027, the IMF said.
In the statement, the IMF said its executive board commended Japan’s “strong economic resilience” to global shocks and agreed the BOJ โ was appropriately withdrawing monetary accommodation.
“They noted that as underlying inflation converges toward the BOJ’s target, gradual rate hikes toward neutral should continue” in a flexible, well-communicated and data-dependent approach, the statement said.
“Directors stressed the importance of maintaining โa โflexible exchange rate as a credible shock absorber,” it โadded.
The BOJ ended a massive stimulus in โ2024 and raised interest rates several times, including in December, on the view that Japan was on the cusp of durably hitting its 2% inflation target.
The central bank has stressed its readiness to keep raising rates on the expectation that underlying inflation will converge to its 2% target sometime from the second half of fiscal 2026 into fiscal 2027. Japan’s fiscal year starts in April.
While rising oil prices hurt โJapan’s import-reliant economy, BOJ policymakers have signalled their concern they โwill add to inflationary pressures from years of steady wage โgains and broader price increases.
The BOJ’s slew โof hawkish communication has prodded markets to price in a roughly 70% chance โof a rate hike in April.
The yen’s slide โtowards the key 160-per-dollar level โhas also kept markets on alert for the chance of currency intervention by Japanese authorities.
Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama issued a fresh warning against yen bears on Friday, saying Japan stood ready to โact against speculative moves in โthe currency market.
“We’re ready to take all available means that are legally feasible, be it โconventional or non-conventional,” she told an online programme on Friday evening.
(Reporting by Leika Kihara; โAdditional reporting by Yoshifumi Takemoto; Editing by Kate Mayberry)