:Japan's Inflation Rate Doubles to 0.8% as Oil Surges
Jan. 25 (Bloomberg) -- Japan's inflation rate doubled in December to the fastest in more than nine years, as companies passed rising oil and commodity costs to consumers.
Core consumer prices, which exclude fresh food, climbed 0.8 percent from a year earlier, the statistics bureau said today in Tokyo.
Oh, don't cry for me, Ryokan. I was being a little bit overly dramatic.:
Here's what the link said:
Yeah, I read the link. But I'm not initiated in the mystic arts of economonics. For all I know, an inflation rate of 0,8% could bring about the end of the world.
The article also mentioned that the price of food and power was rising, while wages were falling. As I said, I have very little knowledge about economics, but this does not sound like a very good thing.
So, anyway, hang in there! がんばて!
So no chance of the yen plummeting like the dollar then? Shame. For me, that is![]()
Is anyone there comparing it to what happened in the 80's?
acuity said:Japan is unusual in including energy in its "core inflation" measure--I think most countries exclude both food and energy. What that means is that I don't think there is an effect hitting Japanese consumer prices that isn't also being felt elsewhere. I suspect there's not much chance of the Bank of Japan taking any notice of this statistic right now and, say, raising interest rates.
Reduced Bets
Investors reduced bets that the central bank will lower the key lending rate from 0.5 percent later this year. There's a 43 percent chance of a cut by July, down from 67 percent before the inflation report, according to calculations by JPMorgan Chase & Co. using overnight interest-rate swaps.
``The market's been underestimating the BOJ's focus on inflation,'' said Jan Lambregts, head of Asian research at Rabobank International in Hong Kong. ``An actual rate cut could produce an increase in inflation expectations, which would only act to depress the consumer further.''
Japan has never really recovered from that. Too much central control of the economy in Japan, plus the population is aging.Is anyone there comparing it to what happened in the 80's?
Yes, I agree.Actually it seems like they are more likely to cut rates than raise them.
Yes. Also Japan's demographics (about which you've written elsewhere) suggest a very low rate of trend real growth which would indicate low / zero inflation and low/zero interest rates too. The problem with this is the rising proportion of savers in Japan's population (elderly) who really don't like the ultra-low yields very much. (Though they must be getting used to them)I'm beginning to think this BOJ "zero-rate" policy is not temporary like they claimed but may be semi-permanent for various reasons including the deflationary pressure and the size of the government debt. Excluding energy and food, it's been nine years of deflation now.