The majority are raising rates in steps of 50 basis points. Others like the Bank of England are raising rates in steps of 25 basis points (but started raising last year). The exception is the European Central Bank which hasn't raised rates at all and is still maintaining negative interest rates.
Feeling shamed by this state of affairs, Klaas Knot of the Netherlands (who sits on the ECB board) broke ranks to say the ECB should raise rates by 50 basis points to bring rates to zero. Sounds reaonable as zero is still lower than the rest of the world. But he got pushback from fellow board member Villeroy of France arguing that a raise of 50bps is going too fast...
Meanwhile inflation rages on.
Japan hasn't raised rates either, but their inflation is still very low.
There is obviously something going on in Japan that's different to elsewhere.