Bank of Japan offers bleaker view on economy, flags upbeat wage signs
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[April 04, 2024] By
Leika Kihara
TOKYO (Reuters) -The Bank of Japan cut its economic assessment for most
regions on Thursday but signaled its confidence that wage hikes were
broadening, leaving scope for another hike in the country's still-low
interest rates.
In a quarterly report on regional economies, the central bank said there
was hope that smaller firms would hike wages by the same amount as last
year or more, after bumper pay hikes were offered to employees by their
bigger counterparts.
"With strong wage hikes sustained for two straight years, companies are
changing their behavior to cope with rising labor costs," such as
boosting investment to streamline operations, the BOJ said.
"As wage hikes broaden, many regions saw a steady increase in the number
of firms that were passing on labor costs or were considering doing so,"
it said.
The BOJ's regional report will be among factors the board will
scrutinize in producing fresh quarterly growth and inflation forecasts
at its next rate review on April 25-26.
The BOJ ended eight years of negative interest rates and other remnants
of its unorthodox policy last month, making a historic shift away from
its focus on reflating growth with decades of massive monetary stimulus.
While the decision was driven partly by hefty wage hikes offered by big
firms, the pace of further interest rate increases will likely be swayed
by whether pay rises will spread to smaller firms in regional areas of
Japan, analysts say.
Japan's intensifying labor shortage was keeping firms under pressure to
hike wages, or prepare for an era where they need to keep raising pay to
attract talent, said Takeshi Nakajima, the BOJ's branch manager
overseeing the Kansai western Japan region.
"When I ask companies what they see as future business challenges, they
immediately talk about labor shortages," he told a news conference.
Japanese firms have agreed to raise wages by 5.24% this year, a third
survey by labor umbrella Rengo showed on Thursday, roughly unchanged
from the second survey that showed the biggest rise under comparable
data since 2013.
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The Japanese national flag waves at the Bank of Japan building in
Tokyo, Japan March 18, 2024. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon/File Photo
The third survey covers a larger number of firms, including smaller
ones, than the first and second surveys.
TEMPORARY DARK CLOUDS?
In the regional report, the BOJ cut its assessment for seven of
Japan's nine regions.
The downgrades were mostly due to the hit to consumption from
unusually warm weather during the winter and slumping output due to
auto production disruptions, the report said.
Japan's factory output unexpectedly fell in February due to
production and shipment disruption at Toyota Motor and its small-car
unit, which could weigh on the broader economy due to their huge
presence in the country's manufacturing sector.
"The region's auto output clearly fell at the start of this year.
But it's likely to recover to fairly high levels soon," said Tetsuya
Hiroshima, the BOJ's branch manager overseeing the Tokai central
Japan region that is home to Toyota and many parts suppliers.
While the BOJ's report said factors weighing on consumption and
output were temporary, some branch managers warned of other risks
such as the fallout from China's economic slowdown.
"Exports aren't doing so well mainly due to weak IT-related
shipments to China, and the drag is lasting longer than many firms
had expected," said BOJ Osaka branch manager Nakajama.
(Reporting by Leika Kihara; Editing by Kim Coghill and Shri
Navaratnam)
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