Japan spent three decades fighting deflation. The OECD just said the country is ready for the kind of interest rate normal most of the developed world takes for granted.
In a report out Wednesday, the OECD said the Bank of Japan should keep hiking and reach 2% by the end of 2027, up from 0.75% today. The group called the conditions for ongoing hikes "firmly in place."
Why The OECD Is Endorsing More Hikes
The case rests on three points: higher inflation expectations, solid wage growth, and a closed output gap. The output gap is the difference between actual GDP and what the economy can produce at full capacity, and when it closes, price pressure tends to build.
That mix tells policymakers the inflation isn't just imported from oil or food. It's now feeding through Japan's domestic labor market, as workers ask for and get higher pay.
The OECD also pointed out that Japan's 0.75% rate sits near the bottom of the estimated neutral range. That's the rate that neither pushes growth up nor holds it back, meaning policy is still loose.
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The Growth Numbers Are More Modest
The OECD doesn't expect Japan to boom. It projects growth of 0.7% in 2026 and 0.9% in 2027, both down from 1.2% last year, with the Middle East conflict cited as the main drag.
Consumer spending and business investment are still expected to hold up well enough to keep inflation moving toward the 2% target. That's the part of the picture that matters most for rate decisions.
The OECD also pushed Tokyo to lean on consumption tax increases for revenue. Japan's current 10% rate is among the lowest in the OECD, leaving real room to raise it.
What To Watch
The BOJ meets on June 15-16, when policymakers will review their plan to taper government bond purchases and set out a new framework for buying from April 2027 on.
The OECD also warned the BOJ to stay flexible on those bond purchases if the market gets choppy. Years of yield suppression have thinned out the base of buyers, leaving Japanese government bonds more sensitive to shifts in BOJ behavior.
For investors watching Japan, the June meeting is the next pressure point.
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