Japanese real wages fell for the eighth consecutive month in August as inflation continued to outpace nominal pay growth, adding pressure on the Bank of Japan’s cautious path toward policy normalization.
Government data showed inflation-adjusted real wages dropped 1.4% year-on-year in August — the sharpest decline in three months — following a downwardly revised 0.2% fall in July. The decline was driven by persistently high prices and a steep 10.5% drop in one-off special payments, such as bonuses, as some firms struggled to match last year’s summer payouts.
Nominal wages, or total cash earnings, rose 1.5% to an average of ¥300,517 ($1,994), the slowest increase in three months. Regular pay climbed 2.0%, while overtime pay — often viewed as a proxy for business activity — increased 1.3%, moderating from July’s 3% rise.
The consumer inflation rate used to calculate real wages rose 3.1% in August, the lowest in 10 months but still more than enough to erode household purchasing power. Despite this, the BOJ maintains that wage gains will continue into next year, even as softer data and the uncertain impact of U.S. tariffs complicate the outlook for future rate hikes.
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Impacts to watch for:
FX: Weak wage data reinforce expectations that the BOJ will stay cautious on rate hikes, weighing on the yen.
Rates: Sluggish real income growth suggests limited inflation persistence, keeping JGB yields capped.
Equities: Consumer sectors could face headwinds from weak household spending, while exporters may benefit from a softer yen.