Toyota Motor, along with other major Japanese companies including Panasonic, Nippon Steel, and Nissan, has agreed to meet union demands for significant pay increases during annual wage negotiations.
- The wage increases are expected to provide leeway for the central bank to shift away from its long-standing policy of negative interest rates.
- Toyota, the world’s largest carmaker, has agreed to monthly pay increases of up to 28,440 yen ($193) and record bonus payments, without specifying a percentage figure for the salary rise.
- The momentum for wage hikes is seen as a positive sign by the Japanese government, with hopes that it will extend to small and mid-sized companies.
- The Bank of Japan, which has maintained massive stimulus and ultra-low interest rates to stimulate economic growth, is set to hold its next policy-setting meeting on March 18-19.
- The request from workers at major firms for annual wage increases stands at 5.85%, breaching the 5% level for the first time in 31 years.
- While the pay increases are attributed to global wage trends, domestic labor shortages, and inflation, the sustainability and spread of wage hikes to small and medium-sized companies remain uncertain.