Bank of Japan's 'bazooka' chief Kuroda's record tenure

Bank of Japan's 'bazooka' chief Kuroda's record tenure

Outgoing Bank of Japan governor Haruhiko Kuroda (C) had both a strong network in Japan and an international profile
Outgoing Bank of Japan governor Haruhiko Kuroda (C) had both a strong network in Japan and an international profile. Photo: KAZUHIRO NOGI / AFP/File
Source: AFP

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Bank of Japan governor Haruhiko Kuroda is stepping down after a 10-year tenure defined by his signature "bazooka" of easy money policies, designed to reboot the country's moribund economy.

Since he took charge, the central bank's assets have quadrupled, surpassing GDP in a first for a Group of Seven nation.

As Prime Minister Fumio Kishida nominates a replacement for Kuroda, whose second and final term ends in April, here are five key moments from his time at the helm -- the longest ever for a BoJ chief.

'Abenomics' architect

In 2013, then-prime minister Shinzo Abe tasked Kuroda with getting his "Abenomics" policy off the ground: an attempt to blast Japan's stagnant economy back to growth after the harmful deflation of the 1990s and 2000s.

Shinzo Abe tasked Kuroda with getting his 'Abenomics' policy off the ground
Shinzo Abe tasked Kuroda with getting his 'Abenomics' policy off the ground. Photo: TORU HANAI / POOL/AFP
Source: AFP

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Why Kuroda? The former finance ministry official not only had a strong network in Japan but also boasted an international profile after eight years leading the Asian Development Bank.

Perhaps most importantly, he was dedicated to the government's ambitions to ramp inflation up to two percent through a so-called "bazooka" of asset purchases.

As BoJ chief, Kuroda vowed to do "everything possible" to reverse Japan's "lost decades", setting an optimistic timeframe of two years to hit the two-percent target.

Peter Pan

It wasn't an easy task, however. By 2015, Japan's economy was again spluttering, with inflation close to zero.

But Kuroda remained confident, citing the story of Peter Pan and its message that "the moment you doubt whether you can fly, you cease forever to be able to do it".

The reference would later turn against him, as commentators accused Kuroda of living in a "fantasy world" given his confidence in the face of sluggish inflation.

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Drastic measures

The Bank of Japan began spending hundreds of billions of dollars a year on government bonds.

In 2016, the Bank of Japan adopted a negative interest rate
In 2016, the Bank of Japan adopted a negative interest rate. Photo: JIJI PRESS / JIJI PRESS/AFP/File
Source: AFP

But its huge "quantitative and qualitative monetary easing" scheme failed to boost growth or inflation, prompting the central bank to take more drastic measures.

In January 2016, the BoJ adopted a negative interest rate of -0.1 percent, effectively charging banks to keep their money there with the hope that it would incentivise them to loan capital out to boost economic activity.

Later that year, Kuroda announced another step -- buying as many or few 10-year government bonds as necessary to ensure their yields remained steady at zero.

Stalemate

For years, the bank stuck to its ultra-loose stance.

Kuroda appeared to try everything, but both prices and the economy were still far from booming.

A lack of major reforms to raise salaries, and the challenge of a rapidly ageing population meant the country grew more reliant on the BoJ's easing, along with economic stimulus measures from the government.

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The economic shock of the Covid-19 pandemic made the situation even worse.

Tumbling yen

In 2022, central banks worldwide began rounds of aggressive tightening to tame soaring inflation -- but the Bank of Japan did not do the same, sticking instead to its ultra-low rates.

Japanese inflation has hit a multi-decade high of four percent, but the BoJ sees the trend as unsustainable, driven by temporary factors rather than consumer demand and wage increases.

The Bank of Japan has stuck to its ultra-low interest rates
The Bank of Japan has stuck to its ultra-low interest rates. Photo: Richard A. Brooks / AFP
Source: AFP

With Kuroda standing firm, the policy gap between the BoJ and the US Federal Reserve caused the yen to plummet against the dollar to a 32-year low, prompting the government to use tens of billions of dollars of reserve funds to bolster the currency.

Kuroda made a surprise move in December, tweaking the bank's longstanding easing programme, widening the band in which it allows rates for 10-year government bonds to move.

The change -- a rare shift of gears for the dovish central bank -- saw the yen strengthen rapidly against the dollar.

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Source: AFP

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