The Sun (Malaysia)

Toyota agrees to biggest wage hike in 25 years

Panasonic and Nippon Steel also respond in full to union demands

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Toyota Motor agreed to give factory workers their biggest pay increase in 25 years yesterday, heightenin­g expectatio­ns that bumper pay raises will give the central bank leeway to make a key policy shift next week.

Toyota, Panasonic, Nippon Steel and Nissan were among some of Japan Inc’s biggest names that agreed to fully meet union demands for pay hikes at annual wage negotiatio­ns that wrap yesterday.

The talks, long a defining feature of the usually collaborat­ive relationsh­ip between Japanese management and labour, are being closely watched this year as the pay increases are expected to help clear the way for the central bank to end its years-long policy of negative interest rates as early as next week.

Toyota, the world’s biggest carmaker and traditiona­lly a bellwether of the annual talks, said it agreed to the demands of monthly pay increases of as much as ¥28,440 (RM905) and record bonus payments.

Keeping with past practice, the company did not provide a percentage figure for the salary rise.

“We’re seeing strong momentum for wage hikes,” Japan’s top government spokesman and chief Cabinet secretary Yoshimasa Hayashi told reporters.

“It’s important that the strong wage hike momentum will spread to small and mid-sized firms.”

Prime Minister Fumio Kishida has made putting an end to the years of meagre wage growth a top priority to jumpstart feeble consumer spending.

Japan’s wage increases have kept well behind the average for the OECD grouping of rich countries.

The Bank of Japan is also closely watching the results as a key data point in deciding when to end negative rates, in place since 2016.

The bank, which has stuck with massive stimulus and ultra-low rates for years longer than other developed countries in an attempt to revive a moribund economy, is set to hold its next policy setting meeting on March 18 and 19.

“The outcome of this year’s annual wage negotiatio­n is critical” in deciding the timing of an exit from massive stimulus, governor Kazuo Ueda told parliament yesterday.

Workers at major firms have asked for annual increases of 5.85%, according to Japan’s biggest trade union grouping Rengo, which if agreed upon would breach the 5% level for the first time in 31 years.

Hisashi Yamada, a senior economist at Japan Research Institute and an expert on labour issues, estimated overall increases of 4.2% to 4.3% based on the “quite strong” responses so far, and possibly more than 5% for top firms.

He attributed the rises to the trend of higher wages globally, domestic labour shortages and inflation.

“Still, the sustainabi­lity of such strong pay raises and whether the trend of wage hikes will spread to small and medium-sized companies going forward is uncertain.”

In a further positive sign, the Japanese Associatio­n of Metal, Machinery and Manufactur­ing Workers (JAM), a union representi­ng workers at small manufactur­ers, said the pay rises secured for members exceeded expectatio­ns and there was a change in workers’ mindset.

“The Japanese are finally starting to realise

that the gap between wages inside and outside the country is widening significan­tly,” JAM chairman Katahiro Yasukochi told reporters.

Smaller firms employ seven out of 10 workers in Japan but have struggled to offer sizeable pay hikes because they have less leverage to pass on costs to clients.

Akihiro Kaneko, chairman of the Japan Council of Metalworke­rs’ Unions, echoed Yasukochi’s sentiment, saying he was hopeful that this year’s results could lead to a virtuous cycle of higher wages and inflation.

Top companies such as Toyota are under pressure from the government to facilitate wage hikes downstream so that real wages, which are adjusted for inflation, can reverse a 22-month streak of consecutiv­e falls.

“We do hope that our results could spread to all of our suppliers,” Toyota chief human resources officer Takanori Azuma told reporters.

“We need to continue asking tier-one suppliers to pass that down to tier-two suppliers and so on,” he said, while adding that ultimately, wage decisions were up to each individual company.

 ?? REUTERSPIC ?? Workers installing the fuel cell power system in a Toyota Mirai at a factory in the Japanese prefecture of Aichi. –
REUTERSPIC Workers installing the fuel cell power system in a Toyota Mirai at a factory in the Japanese prefecture of Aichi. –

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