Bangkok Post

Japan Inc sticks to bonus commitment­s

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TOKYO: Japan Inc has largely stuck to bonus commitment­s made in March despite the escalation of the coronaviru­s pandemic since then, according to business lobby data.

Individual bonuses for employees fell 2.2% to 901,147 yen ($8,525), a weighted average of special payments by 153 large corporatio­ns tallied by business lobby Keidanren shows. That compared with a 3.4% drop a year ago.

The data indicate that Japanese companies preferred to honour previously agreed bonus payments, even though the extra payments are seen as a major tool for cutting short-term labour costs when businesses run into trouble.

A similar pattern was seen during the global financial crisis, when 2008 winter bonuses fell just 0.4% after the collapse of Lehman Brothers.

Summer bonuses the following year slumped 17%, according to the lobby.

“The results this time reflect corporate earnings from fiscal year 2019, so the coronaviru­s’s impact on bonuses will be delayed. The winter bonuses are likely to see a far worse impact,” SMBC Nikko Securities Inc’s Koya

Miyamae said.

The end-of-year bonuses could fall close to 20%, he added.

The data come after Japan was placed in a state of emergency for much of April and May.

Japan’s economy is seen shrinking by more than 20% in the AprilJune quarter on an annualised basis, the biggest contractio­n in data back to 1955.

Japanese companies typically use bonuses to weather economic ups and downs while maintainin­g base pay and jobs for their employees.

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