
Policy Committee Advocates "Timely" Rate Hikes to Curb Inflation
According to the summary of opinions from the December policy meeting released on Monday, there is a strong consensus within the Bank of Japan regarding the urgency of continuing to raise interest rates. The minutes show that several policymakers clearly stated during the meeting that the Bank of Japan should take "timely" action to effectively curb future inflation pressures. This position indicates that, following decades of massive monetary support, the Bank of Japan is determined as never before to steer monetary policy back to a normalized track.
During the meeting on December 18-19, the Bank of Japan took a critical step, raising the policy rate from 0.5% to 0.75%. Although this move is seen as a landmark decision, committee members widely believe that because the current actual policy rate (adjusted for inflation) remains in negative territory, further rate hikes are not only necessary but also urgent. Through this proactive policy adjustment, the Bank of Japan aims to establish an effective defense mechanism before prices spiral out of control.
Significant Gap from Neutral Rate Level Remains
One of the most striking views in the minutes is that the current interest rate level of the Bank of Japan remains quite distant from the so-called "neutral rate." The neutral rate is the level that neither stimulates nor restrains economic growth, and the current 0.75% is clearly still expansionary. Some committee members pointed out that to steadily achieve policy goals, the Bank of Japan should consider normalizing rate hikes at a frequency of "every few months." This proposed pace suggests that Japan's borrowing costs will continue to rise.
Policymakers emphasized that excessively low rates are a deep-seated cause of the yen's weakness and abnormal fluctuations in long-term interest rates. When policy rates are extremely low compared to inflation rates, the pressure for currency devaluation manifests through capital outflows and trade imbalances. Therefore, gradually raising the rate floor is seen as a key method to stabilize financial markets and guide expectations back to rationality.
Profound Impact of Rate Adjustments on the Long-Term Bond Market
The meeting minutes also detailed the complex logic between rate hikes and long-term interest rates. An authoritative view suggests that timely increases in policy rates can actually serve as a stepping back to advance, helping to suppress inflation expectations and thereby lower medium to long-term nominal rates. This logic breaks the market's single fear that rate hikes inevitably lead to a bond market crash, showcasing the Bank of Japan's strategic depth in managing the yield curve.
Since changes in long-term borrowing costs directly impact corporate capital spending and household mortgage loans, the Bank of Japan maintains high attention to this. Committee members believe that allowing inflation expectations to diverge would lead to chaotic surges in long-term rates, causing greater harm to the real economy. Therefore, an orderly and transparent path to rate hikes is considered the optimal solution to protect Japan's economic growth achievements. With the disclosure of the December meeting minutes, global investors are closely watching the Bank of Japan's next moves to cope with the impending new global liquidity situation.






