Big changes are afoot in the last significant enclave of dovish monetary policy. Kazuo Ueda will become the next governor of the Bank of Japan on April 9, succeeding the current governor, Haruhiko Kuroda, who has presided over nearly a decade of ultra-dovish monetary policy. Now that other major central banks have spent over a year deploying hawkish anti-inflation policies, will new leadership mean an reversal in BOJ thinking?