Japan worried about INflation?
by MEDIA CONTACT RESOURCES, INC.
The Bank of Japan (BOJ) decided not to raise interest rates and
kept its key lending rate near zero. But, according to a Bloomberg News
story filed on April 28, 2006, the head of the bank and his eight
colleagues were tempted.
Consumer prices in Japan have been rising over the past five
months. Last month, said Bloomberg, the BOJ signaled clearly that the
time may be near when it would start increasing rates. But, apparently,
prices have not risen quite enough to justify the increase just yet. An
increase would be the first in five years.
Bloomberg also pointed out that China had raised its key lending
rate unexpectedly the day before (April 27, 2006) and both the United
States (US) Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank are
"tightening credit." If rates rise in Japan, as expected, then
it will be the first time in six years that the world's major
economies raised rates in unison.
In Japan, core consumer prices (excludes food) rose 0.5 percent in
March 2006 compared to the same period in 2005. Japan's economy has
been experiencing deflation for the past seven years while expanding at
the same time. In fact, since it is likely to continue, the period of
expansion will soon be the economy's longest since the end of World
War II. Unemployment is at a seven year low.
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