The Bank of Japan appears to have won its first major policy test with Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi, securing tacit government approval for a December rate hike to 0.75%.
Reuters have the opinion piece, I've summarised into a much more concise quick read.
BoJ Governor Ueda effectively pre-signalled the move in a recent speech, and both Finance Minister Katayama and key government advisers offered no resistance, an unusually smooth response from an administration that had previously criticised early tightening.
- A weak yen and the political sensitivity around inflation helped shift the government’s stance, giving Ueda room to proceed with gradual normalisation.
- But the more difficult task lies ahead: the BOJ still lacks a clear framework for explaining its long-term rate path, especially with little agreement on where Japan’s neutral rate sits.
The uneasy compromise means markets will remain focused on Ueda’s forward guidance. A cautious tone could pressure the yen, while stronger hints of continued tightening risk unsettling the government. Analysts warn that with the neutral-rate range estimated anywhere between 1% and 2.5%, communication around future hikes may stay deliberately vague.