BOJ's Kuroda calls for 'rational' G7 debate on trade

Reuters  |  WHISTLER, British Columbia 

By Kihara

Countries that adopt protectionist measures will only see their economies suffer from disruptions in imports, as other countries will likely take counter-measures, he said.

"I don't think the tide of free trade will shift. But it's important to carry on discussion so that things don't escalate," Kuroda told reporters upon arrival for a meeting of and central governors of the advanced economies.

"I can only say that we need rational discussions."

Fears of a global trade war are overshadowing talks at the Canadian resort town, as Washington's allies vowed to push back against a U.S. decision to impose tariffs on their and aluminum exports.

Unlike some other U.S. allies, had not been granted even temporary tariff exemptions. But policymakers remain wary of pushing back too much, given its close defense ties with the United States, analysts say.

Japanese Taro Aso, who was also in for the G7, repeated Tokyo's request for a permanent exemption in talks with his U.S. counterpart on Thursday, a senior Japanese finance ministry told reporters.

Aso also called on the to join forces in stopping from taking market-distorting trade practices, the said, a sign wants a united front with against despite disagreement over U.S. tariffs.

"still takes various market-distorting trade and investment practices. There were discussions on how to bring China into the global, rule-based economic system," the said. He added that Aso and Mnuchin did not discuss currency moves, or whether and the should enter into talks for a bilateral free trade agreement (FTA).

The meet against a backdrop of solid global economic growth, though rising U.S. interest rates has caused capital outflows from some emerging economies such as and

Kuroda said he did not see problems in the two countries spilling over into other emerging economies with sound fundamentals, particularly those in

"U.S. monetary policy normalisation is proceeding very cautiously," Kuroda said. "The fact U.S. monetary policy is normalising is because the U.S. economy is in good shape and inflation is converging toward the central bank's target. If so, that's beneficial for the global economy."

(Reporting by Kihara; Editing by and Jacqueline Wong)

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, June 01 2018. 09:43 IST