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Tight job market puts pressure on wages

Retail sales up at slower pace in October

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TOKYO: Japan’s labour market showed further signs of tightening in October, a developmen­t that will help keep upward pressure on wages.

The job-to-applicants ratio climbed to 1.35 last month, meaning there were 135 jobs offered for every 100 applicants, the labour ministry reported yesterday.

It was a slight rise from 134 positions a month earlier, and matched the economists’ forecast.

A separate report also showed the unemployme­nt rate remained low in October.

The jobless rate stayed at 2.6%, according to the ministry of internal affairs.

The number of people with jobs increased by around half a million compared to the year before, led by gains in the hospitalit­y and medical sectors.

“The labour market is certainly tightening but if you look at the details, you see many openings in the service sector whose pay scale is low,” said economist Takeshi Minami at Norinchuki­n Research Institute.

“In that sector, wage growth will be big in terms of percentage figures but to get a 3% raise in the entire labour market, you’d need nearly a 5% raise in the spring wage negotiatio­ns including regular pay hikes.”

While the figures suggest the strong labour conditions will keep upward pressure on wages, they still show tightness in the labour market remains well below pre-pandemic levels.

Those numbers failed to produce the wage gains sought by Bank of Japan (BOJ) governor Haruhiko Kuroda, who has repeatedly maintained that Japan needs pay cheques to grow at around 3% to meet the central bank’s 2% sustainabl­e inflation goal.

For the BOJ to move away from its current accommodat­ive policy, the labour market may need to strengthen further to encourage firms to raise wages at a faster pace.

Whether gains can continue will partly depend on how the global economy fares, with the outlook appearing increasing­ly gloomy.

The government is already making some efforts to push up pay. Prime Minister Fumio Kishida announced a 71.6 trillion yen (RM2.32 trillion) economic stimulus package last month that includes incentives for businesses to increase wages and help support the economy, in addition to anti-inflationa­ry measures.

“Japan’s labour market isn’t as strong as the rise in October’s job-to-applicant ratio suggests.

“The shadow unemployme­nt rate, which includes people who were employed but not actually working – increased. That points to leeway for companies to shed staff,” said economist Yuki Masujima.

A separate data report showed retail sales grew at a slower pace of 0.2% in October compared with the previous month, as accelerati­ng inflation cooled households’ appetite for shopping.

Economists had expected gains of 1%. Department store and supermarke­t sales rose 4.1% from a year earlier.

“With inbound tourism resuming, consumptio­n is holding up,” said Norinchuki­n’s Minami.

“But wages are failing to keep up with inflation, cutting into incomes. That’s going to limit consumer activities.” — Bloomberg

 ?? ?? Labour conditions: Commuters walk outside Tokyo station. The number of people with jobs increased by around half a million compared to the year before, led by gains in the hospitalit­y and medical sectors. — AFP
Labour conditions: Commuters walk outside Tokyo station. The number of people with jobs increased by around half a million compared to the year before, led by gains in the hospitalit­y and medical sectors. — AFP

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