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Japan to leave monetary policy tools to BOJ in economic blueprint, document shows

By Thomson Reuters Jul 16, 2026 | 10:22 PM

By Yoshifumi Takemoto and Leika Kihara

TOKYO, July 17 (Reuters) – Japan’s government will state in its economic blueprint that decisions on specific monetary policy tools should be left ​to the Bank of Japan, a final version of ‌the document reviewed by Reuters showed on Friday.

The language will be inserted in the blueprint’s footnote referring to a clause in law stipulating the need to protect the central bank’s independence in setting monetary policy, the document ‌showed.

The ​addition is among several tweaks dovish Prime ⁠Minister Sanae Takaichi’s administration ⁠was forced to make from an earlier draft, which triggered a selloff in the yen and bonds by giving markets the impression it would pressure the BOJ to delay rate ​hikes.

The earlier version said the BOJ must align its decisions to the government’s economic policy, also stipulated in law, but ⁠did not make any reference to ⁠the other clause in law on the central ​bank’s jurisdiction over monetary policy decisions.

“To achieve a strong economy, it ​is very important for monetary policy to be conducted ‌appropriately to see stable price rises,” the final version of the blueprint said.

The final blueprint will also say the government will reach a decision “by early August” on whether and by how ⁠much Japan will cut an 8% consumption tax levied on food, according to the document, which was reported earlier by Kyodo news agency.

The ⁠government was not ‌immediately available to comment.

Japan’s law grants the ⁠central bank independence from political interference, but it ​also ‌requires close coordination with the government’s economic policy.

Citing ​that coordination ⁠mandate, the Takaichi administration and its reflationist advisers have urged the BOJ to proceed cautiously with further rate hikes.

The final version of the blueprint is expected to be approved by cabinet on Tuesday.

(Reporting by Yoshifumi Takemoto and Leika Kihara; Editing by Jacqueline Wong ​and Kate Mayberry)