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Sunday, March 3, 2013

BOJ nominee Haruhiko Kuroda promises to beat deflation


Haruhiko Kuroda  
Mr Kuroda is viewed as a proponent of aggressive monetary easing to end deflation in Japan

Haruhiko Kuroda, nominated to be the next head of Japan's central bank, has promised aggressive steps to achieve 2% inflation, sending Japanese shares higher.
He said the Bank of Japan had not bought enough assets and should buy longer-term government bonds.
Picked by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, Mr Kuroda needs approval from parliament.
Japan's economy has struggled with deflation for many years, seen as a challenge to sustainable growth.
"If I am approved as Bank of Japan governor, I believe it will be my most important duty to ensure the price stability goal (of 2% inflation) is reached as soon as possible," Mr Kuroda told a parliamentary confirmation hearing in his first public comments since he was nominated.
It marks a departure from the current governor, Masaaki Shirakawa, who was not an advocate of aggressive easing measures. Mr Shirakawa steps down on 19 March.
Japanese shares were higher on Mr Kuroda's comments with the Nikkei index hitting a new high for 2013 in early trading.
Mr Kuroda's comments echoed the election promises made by Mr Abe that the central bank needs to do more to convince markets that it will take steps to ease monetary policy.
"I believe that (the BOJ) is not doing enough in terms of the size of its asset purchases or the range of assets being bought," said Mr Kuroda, who is currently president of the Asian Development Bank.
After mounting pressure from the new government, the central bank raised its inflation target to 2% last month.
It was seen by analysts as a major step towards renewing domestic demand.

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