Japan's core consumer price inflation remained under the Bank of Japan's 2% target in March, with the core CPI - which excludes fresh food - rising 1.8% year-on-year, data released on Friday showed. This marks the second consecutive month that the core rate has fallen short of the central bank's objective.
The March reading matched a median market forecast and followed a 1.6% increase in February. Officials said government fuel subsidies have played a role in dampening inflationary momentum by offsetting some of the price pressures generated by the energy shock tied to the Iran war.
A separate gauge that removes both fresh food and fuel from the calculation - a measure the BOJ follows closely as an indicator of demand-driven price trends - rose 2.4% in March from a year earlier. That represented a slight easing from February's 2.5% gain.
Analysts cited by the report expect inflation to move back above the BOJ's 2% target in the coming months, noting that companies may begin to pass through higher fuel costs associated with the Middle East conflict. Such pass-through would reverse some of the moderating effect of government subsidies and push consumer prices higher.
The incoming price data will be one of the inputs the Bank of Japan examines at its policy meeting next week. While the board is widely expected to refrain from raising interest rates at that meeting, it is also expected to signal a readiness to tighten policy if mounting price pressures warrant a response.
Context and implications
The plain readings from March highlight a tension for policymakers: headline pressure from energy costs has been softened by fiscal measures, yet underlying demand-led inflation - as shown by the index excluding fuel and fresh food - remains above 2% albeit slightly below February's pace. The trajectory of corporate pricing decisions on fuel costs is therefore a key factor for future inflation readings and for the BOJ's policy deliberations.
Data points
- Core CPI (excluding fresh food): +1.8% year-on-year in March, after +1.6% in February.
- Core-core CPI (excluding fresh food and fuel): +2.4% year-on-year in March, after +2.5% in February.
These figures will be closely monitored by markets and by the central bank as they assess near-term inflation dynamics and the appropriate policy stance.