The Japanese yen’s recent historic depreciation highlights fundamental economic and policy challenges within Japan. Financial analysts suggest that the currency’s decline is driven by the significant interest rate gap between the Bank of Japan’s persistent ultra-loose monetary policy and the rate hikes implemented by other global central banks, particularly the U.S. Federal Reserve. This divergence, combined with underlying structural issues and trade dynamics, continues to pressure the yen, raising concerns about the long-term efficacy of government market interventions.
- The Japanese yen has experienced a historic slide, reaching multi-decade lows against the U.S. dollar.
- Analysts point to the stark divergence in monetary policy, where the Bank of Japan maintains ultra-low interest rates while other central banks have aggressively raised rates.
- This interest rate gap encourages capital flight from the yen to higher-yielding assets denominated in currencies like the dollar.
- Deeper structural issues, including Japan’s heavy reliance on imported energy and food, exacerbate the domestic economic impact of a weak currency.
- Experts suggest that direct currency interventions by the Japanese government offer only temporary relief without fundamental shifts in monetary policy.
Based in Singapore, CNA (Channel News Asia) covers global developments with an Asian perspective, with correspondents based in major cities across Asia, including Kuala Lumpur, Jakarta, Bangkok, Tokyo, Seoul and Beijing, as well as in New York, Washington D.C. and London.
Official website: https://www.channelnewsasia.com/
Original video here.
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Half past six so called expert. He's talking like Modi and Probowo.
Channel News America (CNA)?