Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda cautioned on Wednesday that the central bank should not view oil price movements in isolation. He explained that a temporary energy shock could potentially evolve into a persistent one if it begins to influence wages, inflation expectations, and corporate pricing behavior.
Governor Ueda drew comparisons with various energy shocks Japan has encountered over past decades. He noted that an identical increase in oil prices can have vastly different effects on wages, expectations, demand, and the exchange rate, depending on the initial economic conditions when the shock occurs.
"If inflation expectations are already elevated and wages are accelerating, the risk of second-round effects becomes significant," Ueda stated. Conversely, if inflation expectations are low and wage growth is stagnant, even a substantial cost shock might not significantly raise those expectations.
"The boundary between temporary and persistent inflation is not mechanically defined," Ueda remarked during a conference co-hosted by the BOJ and its research institute, the Institute for Monetary and Economic Studies. "A temporary shock can become persistent if it alters wages, expectations, and pricing behavior. On the other hand, a large shock may remain temporary if these transmission channels are not activated."
These comments come as surging oil prices, driven by conflict in the Middle East, are intensifying inflationary pressures within the Japanese economy. This situation has prompted BOJ officials to adopt a more hawkish tone, with market participants now anticipating a potential interest rate hike by the central bank as soon as next month.