In an interview with the daily, Kuroda said the BOJ's negative rate policy has not reached its limits.
"The degree of negative rates introduced by European central banks is bigger than Japan. Technically there definitely is room for a further cut," Kuroda told the Sankei.
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While the BOJ hoped the shift to negative rates would encourage banks to lend more, spurring higher spending and inflation, none of that has happened as yet.
The BOJ will also consider whether to make any changes to the 80 trillion yen ($798 billion) per year massive asset-purchase plan once the outcome of a comprehensive assessment of its monetary policies is out in September, Kuroda said.
The asset purchases are a key plank of the central bank's "quantitative and qualitative easing" programme deployed in 2013, aimed at achieving its 2 per cent inflation target. Despite the aggressive easings, however, inflation is well off the target and growth remains anaemic.
Kuroda told the daily the BOJ plans to release the outcome of the assessment on the day of the policy meeting in September.
The BOJ isn't short on policy suggestions. The International Monetary Fund is urging the country to resurrect the type of incomes policy once employed by former US presidents Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter. Japan's main opposition Democratic Party has called for an end to negative rates, saying it damages financial markets functions.
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