Japan’s extraordinarily expensive defence of its monetary policy
As the central bank defies speculators, potential costs mount
In december the Bank of Japan (boj) gave speculators an opening. By lifting its cap on ten-year government bond yields from 0.25% to 0.5%, the central bank raised the prospect that it would abandon its “yield-curve-control” policy entirely. Since then, officials have been put to the test by increasingly unco-operative bond markets. The boj has been forced to make enormous bond purchases in an attempt to drive down the yield, buying ¥9.5trn ($72bn) on January 12th and 13th alone.
This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline “Speculators swatted”
Finance & economics January 21st 2023
- Why health-care services are in chaos everywhere
- China’s re-globalisation paradox
- Venture capital’s $300bn question
- Japan’s extraordinarily expensive defence of its monetary policy
- Investment banks are struggling in a high-interest-rate world
- The rise of the uber-luxurious office
- Could Europe end up with a worse inflation problem than America?
More from Finance & economics
Why your portfolio is less diversified than you might think
The most important idea in modern finance has become maddeningly hard to implement
Can Germany’s economy stage an unexpected recovery?
The situation is dire, but there are glimmers of hope
Giorgia Meloni has grand banking ambitions
Will Italy’s nationalist prime minister manage to concentrate financial power?
Tech tycoons have got the economics of AI wrong
Following DeepSeek’s breakthrough, the Jevons paradox provides less comfort than they imagine
Donald Trump’s economic warfare has a new front
The president has threatened to blow up the global tax system. Will allies be able to stop him?
Don’t let Donald Trump see our Big Mac index
America’s tariff-loving president could learn the wrong lessons from international burger prices