Abstract:The Bank of Japan has been raising rates from near-zero since 2024.
Japans central bank has increased its main interest rate to a new 31-year-high after a surge in global energy prices.
On Tuesday, the Bank of Japan (BOJ) raised its so-called policy rate to 1% from 0.75% - its highest level since 1995.
The decision comes as some other central banks have raised interest rates this year as the Iran war pushed up the cost of living.
Japans interest rates were cut aggressively in the 1990s to combat the fallout from a collapse in prices of assets like property and shares. They had been near zero for two decades as prices fell and growth stagnated.
The bank has been gradually raising its rate since March 2024 - at the time it was the countrys first hike in 17 years.
After twenty years of deflation, Japan is now in an inflationary upcycle, Japan economist Jesper Koll told the BBC.
Emergency/crisis management monetary policy is no longer needed and the BOJ wants to get back to a normal monetary policy, he added.
The BOJ has been under pressure to cool inflation, which was extremely low in the country until relatively recently.
Higher energy prices have fuelled inflation, adding pressure on countries like Japan that depend heavily on oil and gas from the Middle East.
Japans wholesale prices climbed by more than 6% in May from a year earlier, rising at the fastest pace in three years.
But the country‘s overall inflation rate, which was 1.4% in April, currently sits below the BOJ’s target level of 2%.
The BOJ faces a tricky trade-off: Raising interest rates could help lower inflation but higher rates also make borrowing costlier, increasing expenses for the government and businesses.
The bank‘s governor Kazuo Ueda - a central figure in deciding interest rates - missed this week’s meeting due to being in hospital as he is treated for an infected liver cyst.
But, along with other BOJ policymakers, he has expressed an increasingly positive stance on raising rates in recent months.
Even if the situation remains unclear, should it be judged that upside risks to prices outweigh downside risks to economic activity, it will be necessary to thoroughly discuss the pros and cons of raising the policy interest rate, Ueda earlier this month.
Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi, known for her support of boosting spending in the country, has previously dismissed the idea of hiking interest rates, though she is under pressure to bring down Japans inflation.
However, she has not publicly criticised the BOJs push for higher rates since taking office last year.
The latest rate rise is the second since Takaichi took office, and had been expected since the BOJ raised its policy rate to around 0.75% in December.
The decision to raise rates also comes as the bank aims to stabilise the yen, which has come under pressure from other major currencies like the US dollar and the euro.
There has been a sense that the yen is too cheap and that raising its currency will not hurt, said University of California San Diego business professor Ulrike Schaede.
Even with the hike, Japans interest rate remains low compared to other big economies.
The US and UK, for example, currently have interest rates of above 3%, although both central banks are expected to keep their rates on hold when they meet this week.
But what we are seeing could signal a slow global realignment, Schaede said.