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EconomyAI Analysis

Why the Bank of Japan skipped the 2026 joint statement supporting Jerome Powell

2 min readSource

The Bank of Japan remains silent as other global central banks sign a joint statement supporting Fed Chair Jerome Powell against Trump's threats in January 2026.

The world's central banks stood united, but Japan stayed on the sidelines. The Bank of Japan (BOJ) didn't sign a rare joint statement backing Fed Chair Jerome Powell following the Trump administration's threat of criminal indictment, raising questions about Tokyo's alignment with global peers.

BOJ Absence from Powell Support Statement

According to Reuters, Japan declined to comment on the BOJ's absence from the high-profile statement on January 14, 2026. "The matter concerns the BOJ's own judgment, so the government will refrain from commenting," said Chief Cabinet Secretary Minoru Kihara during a regular press conference.

The statement featured heavyweights like the European Central Bank (ECB) and the Bank of England (BoE), along with central banks from South Korea, Brazil, and Australia. They collectively underscored the necessity of protecting central bank independence from political interference, a principle that now seems to have a notable outlier in the G7.

Independence vs. Government Coordination

Kihara emphasized that while specific methods of monetary policy belong to the BOJ, the government believes the ultimate responsibility for macroeconomic policy lies with the state. This subtle distinction highlights the unique relationship where the BOJ is required to maintain "close coordination" with government objectives, potentially complicating its ability to sign onto international political defenses.

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