By CentralBankNews.info
Japan’s central bank maintained its monetary policy stance, as expected, repeating almost word-for-word its statement from last month in which it sees the country’s economy “recovering moderately” and inflation will remain around zero percent for the time being to to the effects of the drop in energy prices.
The Bank of Japan (BOJ) embarked on “quantitative and qualitative easing (QQE) in April 2013 to rid the country of almost 15 years of deflation but has found its efforts hampered by the fall in crude oil prices and a larger-than-expected hit to demand from a rise in sales taxes.
In April the BOJ pushed back its estimate for reaching its inflation target of 2.0 percent to the first half of fiscal 2016, which begins on April 1, 2016, from the 2015 fiscal year.
On July 15 the BOJ lowered its forecast for economic growth in the current fiscal 2015 year to 1.7 percent from April’s forecast of 2.0 percent. It forecast inflation, excluding the impact of last year’s sales tax rise, this fiscal year of 0.7 percent, down from its previous forecast of 0.8 percent.
Japan’s Gross Domestic Product in the first calendar quarter expanded by 1.0 percent from the previous quarter for annual contraction of 0.9 percent, the fourth quarter in a row with a declining annual growth rate.
The consumer price inflation rate eased slightly to 0.4 percent in June from 0.5 percent in May.
The Bank of Japan issued the following statement: