The International Monetary Fund told Tokyo this week that the Bank of Japan should continue withdrawing accommodation and keep gradual rate hikes on track, warning that loosening fiscal settings would erode buffers. See the IMF recommendation on Japan’s policy path. The BOJ has already lifted its policy rate to 0.75%, and the fund said moving toward a neutral stance by 2027 would help anchor expectations.
That technical advice collides with a new political agenda. Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi has pledged a two-year suspension of the 8% sales tax on food and a faster bill timetable, while coalition partners are openly discussing non-debt funding options and reserve use. Reuters reported comments from the junior coalition head urging the government not to micromanage the BOJ and flagging options such as tapping foreign-exchange reserves to cover costs, a move that would raise market scrutiny around fiscal credibility and liquidity.
Meanwhile, external labor-market and migration shifts are altering the macro backdrop. The U.K. jobless rate climbed to 5.2% while wage gains slowed to 4.2%, data that the Bank of England will weigh before cutting rates. Separately, Goldman Sachs says restrictive U.S. immigration policies have driven an estimated 80% plunge in net immigration versus the 2010s baseline, a structural shock that lowers the jobs growth needed to keep unemployment stable and complicates cross-border competitiveness for export-oriented economies like Japan.
Watch how Tokyo balances interest-rate path and fiscal promises this quarter. Markets will react to three things: BOJ signals on future hikes, concrete funding plans for the tax break, and any reserve moves that signal active yen intervention. Position risk accordingly and monitor BOJ communications and Japan’s fiscal roadmap for near-term market-moving detail.