Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda has been hospitalized and will not attend the central bank’s scheduled policy meeting next week, according to a report by Mainichi Shimbun. The BOJ has not disclosed the nature of his condition or the expected duration of his hospital stay.
The meeting in question is a regular gathering of the BOJ’s Policy Board, the body responsible for setting monetary policy in Japan. Decisions made at these meetings directly affect interest rates, bond-buying programs, and the broader direction of Japan’s monetary stance.
Deputy Governor Ryozo Himino is expected to chair the meeting in Ueda’s absence. The BOJ has not indicated that the governor’s hospitalization will alter the agenda or delay any scheduled votes on policy decisions.
Japan’s central bank has been under close observation from international financial institutions, including the IMF and World Bank, as well as market participants tracking shifts in the global economy. The BOJ has maintained an outlier position among major central banks over the past several years, holding interest rates near or below zero while institutions such as the Federal Reserve pursued aggressive rate hikes to counter inflation.
In 2024, the BOJ moved to raise its benchmark interest rate for the first time in decades, a shift that drew significant attention given Japan’s long history of ultra-loose monetary policy. That decision reflected a broader reassessment of inflation dynamics within Japan, where consumer prices had risen above the bank’s 2 percent target for an extended period.
The Federal Reserve, by contrast, has been navigating a different phase of its monetary policy cycle — having raised rates sharply to address inflation and then beginning a gradual easing process as price pressures moderated. The divergence between BOJ and Fed policy has had measurable effects on currency markets and global capital flows.
The BOJ’s next policy meeting was already being watched for signals on the pace of future rate adjustments. Japan’s GDP growth has shown uneven momentum, and global trade conditions have added uncertainty to the economic outlook. Tariffs introduced by the United States on a range of imports have disrupted supply chains and trade volumes across Asia, including Japan, which relies heavily on export-driven growth.
The IMF has flagged risks to the global economy stemming from fragmented trade policy and elevated debt levels in major economies. The World Bank has similarly pointed to slower GDP growth projections in several regions, with monetary policy tightening cited as a contributing factor to reduced investment and consumption.
Against this backdrop, the BOJ’s internal deliberations carry weight beyond Japan’s borders. Any signal of accelerated rate increases could affect the carry trade — a strategy where investors borrow in low-interest currencies like the yen to invest in higher-yielding assets elsewhere. A rapid unwinding of such positions has historically contributed to volatility in global financial markets.
Ueda took over as BOJ governor in April 2023, succeeding Haruhiko Kuroda, who had led the bank for a decade and was closely associated with its unconventional easing policies. Ueda’s tenure has been marked by a gradual pivot away from those policies, though the pace has been cautious given persistent uncertainty about whether inflation in Japan is durable or driven by temporary factors such as energy prices and import costs.
The BOJ has not released a statement on how the governor’s absence will affect the board’s deliberations or whether any decisions will be postponed. The Policy Board has seven members in addition to the governor and two deputy governors, meaning it retains a quorum for binding votes regardless of Ueda’s attendance.
No further details on his medical condition have been made public as of the time of this report.
