Business

Bank of Japan revises down GDP forecast, details green fund

Central bank says economy to grow 3.8% in current fiscal year to March, trimming previous estimate of 4.0%

Updated 4 years ago · Published on 16 Jul 2021 7:30PM

Bank of Japan revises down GDP forecast, details green fund
The central bank kept its key monetary easing measures unchanged, maintaining its longstanding 2% inflation target, which remains far off despite years of efforts. – AFP pic, July 16, 2021

TOKYO – The Bank of Japan today revised down its growth forecast for the current fiscal year and laid out details of its first green fund, announced last month.

The central bank kept its key monetary easing measures unchanged, and maintained its longstanding 2% inflation target, which remains far off despite years of efforts.

In its quarterly report, the BoJ said Japan’s economy would grow 3.8% in the current fiscal year to March, trimming its previous estimate of 4.0% growth “due to the impact of Covid-19”.

However, it revised up the forecast for the year to March 2023 to 2.7% growth from 2.4%.

It raised its inflation forecast to 0.6% for the current year to March from 0.1%, “mainly due to higher energy prices”.

Last month, the central bank announced its first investment fund for efforts to address climate change, as the government works towards its new target of reaching carbon neutrality by 2050.

The scheme, likely to start this year, will be a successor to an existing programme aimed at promoting economic growth more generally.

Today, the central bank said it would provide green loans at a rate of 0%, and the scheme would last until the end of March 2031.

“Although Japan does already have specific government measures to enhance investment in green initiatives, this will represent the first concrete action that the BoJ has taken to actively support steps to tackle climate change,” Naoya Oshikubo, senior economist at SuMi TRUST, said in a commentary ahead of the meeting.

Last week, the European Central Bank set a new inflation target and integrated climate change considerations into its monetary policy strategy.

The Bank of England also said it would next year test the exposure of Britain’s commercial lenders to climate change risks, under an assessment delayed by coronavirus. – AFP, July 16, 2021
 

Related News

Malaysia / 1d

Selangor still Malaysia’s top economic engine, DOSM data counters political claims

Malaysia / 6d

PM: Students abroad should gain positive values ​​from the local community

Malaysia / 1mth

Penang initiates measures to minimise impact of Middle East conflict

Malaysia / 1mth

Penang CM: New developments key to stimulating state economy

Malaysia / 1mth

PM Anwar instructs MetMalaysia to expedite cloud seeding in Kedah, Perlis

Sports & Fitness / 1mth

Thomas Cup: A boost for Zii Jia despite Malaysia losing to Japan

Spotlight

Malaysia

PM Anwar – ‘Rather a torn shirt, than …’ (video)

By Alfian Z.M. Tahir

Malaysia

After years of abandonment, Highland Towers to be demolished before year end

Malaysia

PH seat distribution finalised, PKR to contest 20 Johor PRN seats, 16 in Negeri

Malaysia

Rosmah Mansor denies viral allegations, lodges police report

Malaysia

Four arrested after maid abuse footage exposes alleged pattern of domestic worker mistreatment

Malaysia

Muhyiddin's 'congratulatory' message to Hamzah a fake

Malaysia

Hamzah Zainudin launches new political party, Parti Wawasan Negara

Malaysia

Disturbing video of alleged employers assaulting their helper goes viral (video)

You may be interested

Business

Dollar slides as US-Iran peace breakthrough sparks global risk rally

Business

Markets rally as US-Iran peace framework triggers oil sell-off and weakens dollar