TOKYO- Japanese real wages dropped for a second straight month in February due to higher inflation, labor ministry data showed on Monday, amid broader worries in Japan about the impact of US tariffs.
US President Donald Trump’s sweeping tariffs announced last week have sparked fears of a slowdown in the global economy that could dampen Japan’s fragile recovery.
Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba on Thursday promised measures to help domestic industry deal with the fallout of Trump’s tariffs.
Inflation-adjusted real wages, a barometer of consumer purchasing power, declined 1.2 percent in February from a year earlier after a revised 2.8 percent drop in January, labor ministry data showed.
The consumer inflation rate the ministry uses to calculate real wages, which includes fresh food items but not rent costs, grew 4.3 percent year-on-year, easing only slightly from a 4.7 percent gain in January.
Japan’s ruling coalition and the opposition Democratic Party for the People (DPP) agreed on Friday to curb gasoline prices to help ease the burden on consumers from wider economic pain stemming from US tariffs.
Regular pay, or base salary, rose 1.6 percent in February, slowing from a 2.1 percent rise in January, the data showed.
Overtime pay, a barometer of corporate activity strength, rose 2.2 percent in February, after a revised 1.5 percent increase in January.
Total average cash earnings, or nominal pay, increased 3.1 percent to 289,562 yen ($1,981) for the month, after a revised 1.8 percent rise in January, helped by the gains in special payments. Special payments – mainly made up of volatile one-off bonuses – jumped 77.4 percent, data showed.
Japanese companies have agreed to raise pay by an average of 5.4 percent this year, the biggest pay hike in more than 30 years, the country’s largest union umbrella group Rengo said.
The effect of Japan’s annual spring wage talks usually starts to show up in wage data for April or later.