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Bank of Japan raises interest rates to 31-year high amid Iran war inflation pressures

6 articles
3 sources
0% diversity
Updated 9h ago
Key Topics & People
Bank of Japan *inflation interest rate interest rates oil prices

Coverage Framing

6
Economic Impact(6)
Avg Factuality:77%
Avg Sensationalism:Low

Story Timeline

Jun 14 – Jun 20

4 articles|3 sources
bank of japaninflationinterest ratesmonetary policyinterest rate
Economic Impact(4)
The Guardian - World News9h ago

Bank of Japan raises interest rates to 31-year high amid Iran war inflation pressures

The Bank of Japan (BoJ) has raised its short-term policy rate by 0.25 percentage points to 1%, reaching a 31-year high. This decision was made to counter inflationary pressures, particularly from companies passing on rising oil costs. Despite a recent fall in oil prices due to a potential peace deal between the US and Iran, and a four-year low in Japan's core inflation, the BoJ cited broadening price rises and the risk of underlying inflation deviating from its target. Governor Shinichi Uchida noted uncertainty about the speed of oil supply increases. This move follows the European Central Bank in tightening monetary policy, while the US Federal Reserve and Bank of England are expected to hold rates.

MeasuredFactual2 sources
Neutral
Al Jazeera10h ago

Japan’s central bank raises interest rates to highest level since 1995

The Bank of Japan (BOJ) has raised its benchmark interest rate to 1 percent, the highest level since 1995. This decision marks a significant shift away from decades of ultra-low borrowing costs. The BOJ cited rising price pressures, influenced by the conflict between the United States and Israel against Iran, as a key reason for the hike. The central bank indicated that increasing oil prices are impacting business transactions and could lead to broader price increases, potentially pushing inflation above its 2 percent target. Japan, heavily reliant on Middle Eastern oil imports, is particularly susceptible to fuel price spikes. The government has implemented measures to mitigate these effects on consumers.

MeasuredFactual2 sources
Neutral
BBC News - World12h ago

Japan raises interest rate to highest since 1995

The Bank of Japan has raised its policy interest rate to its highest level since 1995, marking the second such increase since Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi took office. This move, which follows a December rate hike to around 0.75%, is a continuation of the bank's efforts to move away from near-zero rates that began in 2024. The decision comes as the BOJ aims to stabilize the yen, which has weakened against major currencies like the US dollar and euro, with some experts suggesting the yen is considered too cheap. While Japan's new interest rate remains low compared to other major economies like the US and UK, the BOJ's leadership indicated that further rate hikes would be considered if upside risks to prices are judged to outweigh downside risks to economic activity.

MeasuredFactual2 sources
Neutral

Key Claims

statistic

The Bank of Japan raised its short-term policy rate by 0.25 percentage points to 1% from 0.75%.

statistic

This rate hike brings Japan's borrowing costs to their highest level since 1995.

statistic

Japan's annual core inflation fell to a four-year low of 1.4% in April.

quote

The signing of a memorandum by the US and Iran to end the Middle East conflict was 'a welcome move'.

— Shinichi Uchida

statistic

Bank of Japan raises benchmark interest rate to 1 percent.

— Bank of Japan

May 3 – May 9

1 articles|1 sources
interest rate hikeinflationreserve bank of australiarbapetrol prices
Economic Impact(1)
The Guardian - World NewsMay 3

Why the RBA is predicted to deliver a third straight interest rate hike this week

Financial markets predict an approximately 80% chance of the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) implementing a third consecutive interest rate hike this week. This decision comes as inflation reached 4.6% in the year to March, largely driven by a significant spike in petrol prices due to the Middle East conflict. While acknowledging that monetary policy cannot immediately address oil price-driven inflation, economists believe the RBA will raise rates to signal its commitment to controlling inflation and reassure price and wage setters. Despite the global nature of the oil shock, inflation was already high, making the RBA particularly sensitive to its broader economic impact. The RBA's monetary policy board previously voted for a hike with a narrow majority, and analysts suggest the case for another increase is now clearer to prevent inflation from rising further.

Mixed toneMixed3 sources
Negative

Key Claims

statistic

Inflation jumped by almost a percentage point to 4.6% in the year to March, the highest in two and a half years.

— Official figures

statistic

Petrol prices spiked by more than 30% in the month, accounting for most of the month’s inflationary uplift.

— Official figures

factual

The RBA’s nine-member monetary policy board voted to hike rates at the last meeting in March with a five-to-four majority.

quote

There is absolutely nothing that monetary policy can do about inflation in the next six months as it is driven by oil prices.

— Phil O’Donaghoe

prediction

Financial markets indicate a nearly 80% chance that the Reserve Bank will deliver a third straight interest rate rise on Tuesday.

— financial markets

Apr 26 – May 2

1 articles|1 sources
higher inflationinterest ratesbank of englandmiddle east warenergy prices
Economic Impact(1)
The Guardian - World NewsApr 30

Bank of England warns ‘higher inflation is unavoidable’ after leaving interest rates on hold

The Bank of England has maintained its interest rate at 3.75%, despite a split decision by its Monetary Policy Committee. Governor Andrew Bailey stated that higher inflation is now unavoidable due to the war in the Middle East, which is driving up energy prices and consequently fuel costs in the UK. This conflict has altered the inflation outlook significantly from earlier projections. While inflation rose to 3.3% in March, the Bank anticipates that the impact of higher energy prices on broader inflation will be limited by subdued labor demand and weak consumer confidence. The Bank is closely monitoring the global situation and its economic repercussions, with potential for future rate hikes remaining a possibility.

MeasuredFactual4 sources
Negative

Key Claims

factual

The Bank of England's Monetary Policy Committee voted 8-1 to leave interest rates unchanged at 3.75%.

— Bank of England

statistic

UK inflation rose to 3.3% in March, up from 3% in February.

— Office for National Statistics

factual

Chief economist Huw Pill voted to raise interest rates to 4% due to risks of persistent second-round effects.

— Huw Pill

quote

Higher inflation is unavoidable as a result of the war in the Middle East.

— Andrew Bailey

prediction

UK unemployment is expected to rise to at least 5.5% in all three projected economic scenarios.

— Bank of England