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Taming Japan's Deflation: The Debate over Unconventional Monetary Policy

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Gene Park, Saori N. Katada, Giacomo Chiozza, and Yoshiko Kojo
2018
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Bolder economic policy could have addressed the persistent bouts of deflation in post-bubble Japan, write Gene Park, Saori N. Katada, Giacomo Chiozza, and Yoshiko Kojo in Taming Japan's Deflation. Despite warnings from economists, intense political pressure, and well-articulated unconventional policy options to address this problem, Japan's central bank, the Bank of Japan (BOJ), resisted taking the bold actions that the authors believe would have significantly helped.

With Prime Minister Abe Shinzo's return to power, Japan finally shifted course at the start of 2013 with the launch of Abenomics—an economic agenda to reflate the economy—and Abe's appointment of new leadership at the BOJ. As Taming Japan's Deflation shows, the BOJ's resistance to experimenting with bolder policy stemmed from entrenched policy ideas that were hostile to activist monetary policy. The authors explain how these policy ideas evolved over the course of the BOJ's long history and gained dominance because of the closed nature of the broader policy network.

The explanatory power of policy ideas and networks suggests a basic inadequacy in the dominant framework for analysis of
the politics of monetary policy derived from the literature on central bank independence. This approach privileges the interaction between political principals and their supposed agents, central bankers; but Taming Japan's Deflation shows clearly that central bankers' views, shaped by ideas and institutions, can be decisive in determining monetary policy. Through a combination of institutional analysis, quantitative empirical tests, in-depth case studies, and structured comparison of Japan with other countries, the authors show that, ultimately, the decision to adopt aggressive monetary policy depends largely on the bankers' established policy ideas and policy network.

Table of Contents

Cover

Half Title, Series titles, Title Page, Copyright, Dedication

Contents

pp. vii-viii

List of Figures and Tables

pp. ix-x

Preface and Acknowledgments

pp. xi-xiv

Acronyms

pp. xv-xvi

Notes on Conventions

pp. xvii-xviii

1. Ideas, Networks, and Monetary Politics in Japan

pp. 1-8

2. Deflation, Monetary Policy Responses, and the BOJ

pp. 9-42

3. Monetary Politics: Interests, Ideas, and Policy Networks

pp. 43-57

4. The BOJ Worldview and Its Historical Development

pp. 58-83

5. The Monetary Policy Network

pp. 84-111

6. Ideas and Monetary Policy: A Quantitative Test

pp. 112-133

7. Monetary Policymaking, 1998–2012

pp. 134-160

8. Abenomics and the Break with the BOJ Orthodoxy

pp. 161-175

9. Conclusion: Monetary Policy, Networks, and the Diffusion of Ideas

pp. 176-192

Appendix

pp. 193-194

Appendix to Chapter 5

pp. 195-212

Appendix to Chapter 6

pp. 213-220

References

pp. 221-236

Index

pp. 237-243
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