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    Japan’s ‘shunto’ wage negotiations hit fever pitch this week. Here’s why they matter

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    Akihiko Matsuura, president of UA Zensen, second left, raises his fist with members of the union during a rally for the annual wage negotiations in Tokyo, Japan, on Thursday, March 7, 2024.

    Kiyoshi Ota | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    At Japan’s highly anticipated “shunto” spring wage negotiations this year, the world’s largest automaker Toyota agreed to the biggest annual pay increase for workers in 25 years.

    Market speculation reached fever pitch this week as various corporate giants announced robust negotiated salary increments that in some instances exceeded what unions petitioned for.

    Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda has repeatedly said the outcome of this year’s wage negotiations will influence the central bank’s decision on when to exit the world’s last negative interest rate policy.

    Japan’s largest trade union grouping, known as Rengo, will announce the first collation of ongoing wage negotiations on Friday.

    This may figure prominently at the BOJ’s two-day policy meeting starting Monday to decide on its first rate hike since 2007.

    Even though “core core inflation” — which excludes food and energy prices — has exceeded its 2% target for more than a year, the BOJ has barely budged from its current ultra-accommodative monetary policy posture that has been in place since 2016.

    The BOJ’s thinking is that increased wages will stimulate consumer spending, lifting prices in a sustainable manner, and allowing more room for monetary tightening. 

    Here’s what you need to know about this year’s spring wage talks, which takes place annually in March.

    What’s happened so far?

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    According to a Goldman Sachs tally of wage negotiations concluded so far, two of Japan’s largest steel companies agreed to large wage increases that exceeded union expectations — Nippon Steel agreed to 14.2% in wage increments, while Kobe Steel agreed to 12.8%.

    Japan’s largest trade union grouping, also known as Rengo, said earlier this week workers at major Japanese firms have asked for annual increases of 5.85% — fanning hopes of a three decade-high wage increase.

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    This is far higher than the 2023 increase of more than 3%.

    It marks a significant breakthrough in Japan, where real wages have stagnated since a banking crisis in the 1990s.

    Why does it matter? 

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    Almost a third of Japan’s workforce was engaged in part-time employment — often seen as a drag on wages — in January, according to the latest data from the country’s Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare.

    Meanwhile, Japan’s headline inflation averaged 3.2% last year, but it slowed to 2.2% in January. 

    There have also been signs that the recent inflation has crimped domestic demand and private consumption in Japan.

    Japan’s economy averted a technical recession last week, bolstered by strong capital expenditure. However, private consumption fell 0.3% quarter on quarter — more than the provisional estimate of a 0.2% decline.

    What’s ahead?

    We expect the Bank of Japan to exit negative rates in April: Macquarie Group strategist

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