TOKYO- Big Japanese firms are likely to offer the biggest pay hikes in 26 years, a research firm forecast on Monday, supporting policymakers’ aim to achieve sustainable wage growth and stoke economic growth led by the private sector.
Big Japanese firms will offer pay rises of 2.85 percent on average for the financial year starting in April, according to estimates by Japan Economic Research Center (JERC). If realized, they would be the fastest pay rises since 1997 when Japan was entering grinding deflation and ‘lost decades’ of stagnation.
Japanese policymakers are urging cautious Japanese businesses to accelerate wage growth at closely-watched annual ‘shunto’ spring labor-management talks that conclude around mid-March.
While Japan’s inflation rate is now well above the Bank of Japan’s 2 percent target, policymakers say it is mostly driven by commodity and energy costs and is therefore unsustainable without accompanied wage growth.
JERC’s forecast for big firms to offer pay hikes of 2.85 percent, comprises a 1.08 percent rise in base salaries and a 1.78 percent increase in additional salary based on seniority.
Prime Minister Fumio Kishida’s government has called on companies to offer 3 percent annual wage hikes while Japan’s largest Trade Union Confederation, known as Rengo, has called for 5 percent pay increases.
Sustainable inflation entailing wage growth could pave the way for the BOJ to exit its massive monetary stimulus, although BOJ Governor Haruhiko Kuroda has repeatedly said that it would be too early for the central bank to move away from its stimulus policy until virtuous inflation along with wage growth is in sight.
In last year’s wage talks, major Japanese firms offered a pay rise of 2.2 percent on average, the biggest increase in four years. — Reuters