Imf Asia Pacific Regional Seminar On Japan 2022 June
Imf Asia Pacific Regional Seminar On Japan 2022 June
Imf Asia Pacific Regional Seminar On Japan 2022 June
Ranil Salgado
Assistant Director and Japan Mission Chief
Asia and Pacific Department
International Monetary Fund
Manuel
IMF Cosentino
| Asia (Unsplash)
and Pacific Department 1
Roadmap
I. Outlook and policy priorities
• Outlook and risks
• Key policy recommendations
Fiscal policy
Monetary policy
Financial sector policy
Structural policy
II. IMF research highlights
• Model-based analysis of post-pandemic fiscal policy path
• Options for revenue mobilization
• Low for long rates and bank profitability
• Climate change policy options
• Climate finance in Japan
• Digitalizing the Japanese economy
III. Summary
Sources: Haver and IMF Staff Projections Sources: IMF Staff Calculation
0
2022 2023 2024 2025 2026 2027
Sources: Haver and Staff Calculation.
Note: the effect of the VAT rate hike is excluded from all series. Sources: IMF Staff Projections
recovery.
Some measures could have been
better targeted (e.g., cash transfer to
child-rearing households).
1995
2000
2005
2010
2015
2020
2025
2030
2035
2040
2045
2050
2055
2060
Sources: Cabinet Office; and IMF staff estimates and projections. Sources: Cabinet Office; and IMF staff estimates and projections.
1/ Gross debt of the general government including the social security fund. 1/ Gross
Sources: debt of
Ministry ofHealth,
the general
Labor, government including
and Welfare; IMF the socialOutlook
World Economic securitydatabase;
fund. and IMF
staff estimates.
Predictable 1
Limit the scope of covered services and drugs Sources: Cabinet Office and IMF Staff estimates
1/ Compound average growth rate of nominal GDP of 3-year ahead (T+3) over that
of the previous year (T-1). Fiscal-year basis. Projections are as of January each year
Shorten the duration of in-patient care except 2010 (June), 2013 (August) and 2015 (February).
Digital transformation
1400 1400
United States EU-28 India 1200 1200
1000 1000
Russia
800 800
China
By 2030, 46 percent reduction
Japan 600 from 2013 level
600
Iran 400 400
Indonesia
200 Greenhouse Gas emissions 200
South Korea 2030 target
Saudi Arabia 0 0
Rest of the world 2050 target By 2050, Carbon neutrality
-200 -200
1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2015 2020 2025 2030 2035 2040 2045 2050
Source: Our World in Data. Sources: Our World in Data; IMF staff calculations.
Note: The highlighted area in blue represents the minimum and maximum of the
net interest margin in that particular year.
IMF | Asia and Pacific Department 28
Low for Long Rates and Bank Profitability
Adaptation Adaptation
(Clean energy and environment
(Resilient infrastructure) innovation)
International
cooperation
Avoid damage indicates the estimated benefits (output gains) of climate change
IMF | Asia and Pacific Department policies that will reduce climate-related damages over the medium- to long- term. 32
Climate Finance in Japan
Valuation Difference between High and Low GHG ESG Equity Fund Flows
(Millions of US Dollars)
Emitters
(Difference in price-earnings ratio) 40,000 1000
15
All Developed Markets (LHS) Japan (RHS)
35,000
10 800
30,000
5 25,000 600
P/E ratio
0 20,000
400
15,000
-5
10,000 200
Materials Industrials
-10 5,000
Consumer Discretionary Consumer Staples
0
Information Technology Total 0
-15
2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 -5,000 -200
Jan-16
Jan-17
Jan-18
Jan-19
Jan-20
Jan-21
May-16
Sep-16
May-17
Sep-17
May-18
Sep-18
May-19
Sep-19
May-20
Sep-20
May-21
Sep-21
Source: Bloomberg and IMF staff calculation.
Note: "total" includes all 11 sectors according to the GICS sector calssification. Emission intensity
measured by GHG emissions scaled by assets.
Sources: EPFR
• The recovery is expected to continue in 2022. Consumption will lead the recovery, with pent-up demand
being unwound. There is significant uncertainty around the outlook, including from the war in Ukraine.
• Near-term policy support to underpin the recovery. Fiscal policies should be supportive in the short-
run, while shifting towards facilitating resource reallocation. The BoJ should maintain monetary
accommodation.
• Medium- and longer-term policies to build back better after the pandemic.
• Fiscal buffers should be rebuilt gradually once the recovery takes hold, guided by a medium-
term fiscal framework underpinned by concrete policy plans.
• The BoJ should maintain monetary policy accommodation while taking further measures to make
that stance more sustainable.
• Financial supervision should remain vigilant to contain vulnerabilities.
• Digital and green transformations could be leveraged to promote strong, sustainable, and
inclusive growth after the pandemic. Reinvigorating reforms to increase labor supply, boost
productivity, and support investment would lift potential growth and facilitate reflation.
IMF | Asia and Pacific Department 40
Thank You!
IMF Japan papers can be downloaded at: https://www.imf.org/en/Countries/JPN
2022 Japan Article IV Staff Report
2022 Japan Selected Issued Papers
Press Release: English |日本語