BoJ Governor Candidate Says No Need to Change Target Inflation

 
Candidate for Governor of the Bank of Japan (Bank of Japan/BoJ), Haruhiko Kuroda said the government does not need to change the inflation target of 2 percent or setting a target for consumer prices, excluding food and energy.

"Target price BoJ is currently focused on core prices, which exclude fresh food and energy costs," said the man aged 68, who decided to resign as president of the Asian Development Bank (ADB), as reported by Reuters on Monday (3/11/2013).


While the core of the Japanese consumer price excluding food and energy, similar to the size of the core consumer price used the United States.

As is known, Kuroda is a proponent of aggressive monetary easing. He often spoke to lawmakers in the upper house should be the policy of the central bank. Prime Minister Shinzo Abe hoped, a former top diplomat was doing radical easing now in control of the BoJ to end a nearly two-decade deflationary Japanese twist.

Meanwhile, Japan's machinery orders fell 13 percent in January 2013, the largest decline in eight months. This result is a signal to the upper limit of the company's investment business encourages Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's economic revival.

Japan returned to growth in the fourth quarter as the yen began to slide, strengthening Abe campaign to end 15 years of deflation and revive the third largest economy in the world.

"Going forward, we expect accelerating consumption, housing and public investment," Devalier said, as quoted by Bloomberg, on Monday (11/03/2013).

"But given the trend of exports is weak, it will take more time before we see a business environment driven by pelamahan yen and increased optimism producers translates into strong corporate investment," he added.
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