Japanese firms expect inflation to rise at a rate less than predicted three months ago, in a sign that faith in the central bank's reflationary efforts is waning, statistics from the Bank of Japan (BOJ) showed on Tuesday.
According to the latest figures, companies here expect consumer prices to increase one percent next year, less than the 1.2 percent expected in a survey taken three months earlier, Xinhua reported.
As for consumer inflation, those firms polled believe that inflation will reach 1.3 percent in three years' time, less than 1.4 percent expected in the bank's September survey, and will reach 1.4 percent in five years' time, also lower than the previous 1.5 percent.
The downturn in projected prices comes amid the latest oil glut which impacts underlying growth and threatens to derail the Japenese bank's lofty target of achieving its two percent inflation goal in as many years.
Despite Japan being mired in deflation for more than two decades, the central bank, under pressure from Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and the Finance Ministry, also working towards the leader's economic policy goals, is attempting to achieve its inflation target through aggressive monetary easing measures.
The measures will encourage businesses and households to spend to reverse the deflationary trend.
BOJ Governor Haruhiko Kuroda's persistently upbeat assessment of the nation's inflation situation may be overly optimistic.
A "deflationary mindset" still plagues the nation, as household spending has remained largely static and businesses, despite boasting record profits, have opted not to redirect surplus funds into wages or employment.
The BOJ's latest survey polled companies in both manufacturing and non-manufacturing sectors, with both revealing weaker inflation expectations, regardless of their industry or size.
The data will be a blow to the BOJ and Abe as the figures come on the heels of consumer prices falling 0.1 percent in October from a year earlier, marking the third straight month of decline.
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