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Bank of Japan chief stresses need to hit 2% inflation backed by wage gains

By Thomson Reuters Mar 16, 2026 | 7:37 PM

By Leika Kihara

TOKYO, March 17 (Reuters) – Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda said underlying inflation is accelerating toward the bank’s ​2% target, stressing that price rises ‌must be matched by solid wage gains.

The remarks came ahead of the central bank’s two-day policy meeting ending on Thursday, where the board is widely ‌expected ​to keep interest rates steady ⁠at 0.75%.

Ueda told parliament ⁠that wages and prices are rising moderately in tandem as firms grow bolder in passing on higher raw material and labour ​costs.

“Underlying inflation is gradually accelerating towards our 2% target,” and is seen converging ⁠around 2% sometime from the ⁠latter half of fiscal 2026 ​through 2027, Ueda said on Tuesday.

“We will guide ​monetary policy appropriately so that Japan sustainably ‌and stably achieve 2% inflation accompanied by wage gains,” he said.

Ueda also repeated the central bank’s readiness to step into the Japanese ⁠government bond (JGB) market in exceptional cases of an abrupt spike in yields.

“Long-term rates are basically set by ⁠markets and ‌fluctuate to some degree reflecting ⁠market views on the economic, price ​as ‌well as fiscal and monetary policy ​outlook,” Ueda ⁠said.

“We will take nimble action in exceptional cases, where long-term interest rates rise sharply in a way deviating from normal market moves.”

(Reporting by Leika Kihara; Editing by Christopher Cushing and ​Shri Navaratnam)