INSIGHT-Abe-Kuroda honeymoon soured by fiscal friction

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 22 Maret 2015 | 18.12

Sat Mar 21, 2015 9:00pm EDT

  * Cracks appearing between Abe and Kuroda over fiscal target      * Kuroda feels Japan shouldn't delay tax hikes, spending  cuts      * Abe open to goals affording more spending flexibility  -sources      * Rift hurts confidence in stimulus, inflation goals        By Leika Kihara and Tetsushi Kajimoto      TOKYO, March 22 (Reuters) - A rift is emerging between Prime  Minister Shinzo Abe and his hand-picked central bank boss on how  to fix Japan's tattered finances, which could blunt the impact  of the "Abenomics" stimulus policies they have worked together  to prosecute.      Two years into Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda's  tenure, the cracks are becoming hard to conceal and could affect  the timing of any further monetary easing and an eventual end to  the massive money-printing programme he set in train.      Their differences over fiscal policy needed to cut Japan's  staggering public debt, which at 230 percent of GDP is twice the  U.S. figure and about 50 points higher than perilous Greece,  have so far been masked by their shared determination to end  deflation.      The perception of common purpose is critical to giving  businesses, markets and consumers the confidence to change  behaviour and ensure that the stimulus measures and inflation  targets are effective.      But the mask began to slip last year when Abe decided to  delay a sales tax hike, making Japan's primary fiscal goal  harder to achieve.      "The honeymoon days are over," said Izuru Kato, chief  economist at Totan Research. "Kuroda must be frustrated over a  lack of progress in structural reform and fiscal consolidation."      A former finance ministry bureaucrat, Kuroda feels Japan  cannot afford to delay tax hikes and spending cuts given its  dire fiscal state, while Abe prefers to focus more on boosting  growth to raise tax revenues.      Last month a key policy panel run by Abe's right-hand man,  Economics Minister Akira Amari, began debating proposals that  could water down Japan's fiscal target of returning to a primary  budget surplus, excluding debt servicing costs and income from  bond sales, in fiscal 2020.      Abe has not resiled from that target, but the panel is  laying the ground for him to add other goals that give him more  wiggle-room on spending, government officials say.            BREACH OF ETIQUETTE      His favourite idea, floated at the panel, is to add a goal  on the ratio of debt to GDP. This ratio falls without deep  spending cuts, as long as the BOJ maintains both low interest  rates and solid economic growth with its massive stimulus.      Defying central bank etiquette, Kuroda spoke against the  proposals at a panel meeting on Feb. 12 in front of Abe.      He returned to the theme two weeks later, despite raised  eyebrows in government.      "Achieving the primary balance target is just a first step.  Only through this would Japan think about gradually reducing the  debt-to-GDP ratio," he told reporters.      Behind his concern is that Japan's huge public debt could  lead to cuts in its sovereign debt ratings, which in turn would  hurt Japanese banks with huge bond holdings.      Delays in fiscal reform are also likely to leave the BOJ  with a bloated balance sheet, already equal to 60 percent of  GDP, for longer than it wants.      Government officials admit they are counting on the BOJ to  keep borrowing costs low for as long as possible, even if that  means delaying an exit from the radical stimulus measures that  have led to that unwieldy balance sheet.      "The BOJ's stimulus is crucial in keeping borrowing costs  low, which is a prerequisite for fiscal reform to proceed," one  government official said on condition of anonymity.      "There's no doubt it has become very hard for the BOJ to end  its quantitative easing programme" during Kuroda's five-year  term ending in April 2018, a ruling party official said.            CONFRONTATION COMING?      Kuroda earned political capital by giving Abe what he wanted  with an intense burst of stimulus in April 2013, which boosted  corporate profits and improved consumer sentiment.      But the relationship soured when he expanded stimulus in  October to pace up inflation without advance consultation with  the administration, say sources familiar with the deliberations.      The move raised suspicion among Abe's aides that Kuroda was  teaming with the finance ministry to nudge a wary premier into  proceeding with the scheduled second sales tax hike in 2015.      Weeks later, Abe decided to postpone the tax hike despite  repeated calls from Kuroda to go ahead with the plan.      Kuroda has continued to push for fiscal reform, and people  close to him say the governor won't shy from expressing his  displeasure at attempts to loosen fiscal discipline.      This suggests political considerations won't influence the  timing of future easing as much as markets suspect, say former  and incumbent policy-makers close to Kuroda.      The real test will come if and when the BOJ succeeds in  hitting its inflation target, which would lead to higher  long-term interest rates, says Kato of Totan Research, a veteran  BOJ watcher.      "That's the moment when the government piles pressure to  keep rates low, making it difficult for the BOJ to end  quantitative easing," he said.      "The true confrontation has yet to come."        (Editing by Will Waterman)  
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