BOJ policy board member Asada said he must see signs that demand is driving inflation before he would support further rate hikes, though he noted cost pass-through is occurring "relatively quickly," implying he could back hikes in future. Asada, the lone dissenter on the BOJ's June move to lift rates to 1% (a 31-year high), said he opposed that decision because Middle East uncertainty could weigh on output and employment. He said any future tightening requires inflation sustainably near 2% under

2026-07-08

BOJ policy board member Asada said he must see signs that demand is driving inflation before he would support further rate hikes, though he noted cost pass-through is occurring "relatively quickly," implying he could back hikes in future. Asada, the lone dissenter on the BOJ's June move to lift rates to 1% (a 31-year high), said he opposed that decision because Middle East uncertainty could weigh on output and employment. He said any future tightening requires inflation sustainably near 2% underpinned by wage growth and demand, conditions he judged not yet met. While oil prices have fallen and consumer inflation is easing, Asada warned earlier oil-driven price increases are transmitting relatively fast and could push broad goods prices higher.