By Satoshi Sugiyama
TOKYO, Jan 8 (Reuters) - Japan's real wages fell in November at the fastest pace since last January, dragged down by a sharp drop in one-off bonus payments, preliminary government data
showed on Thursday.
The underlying trend of inflation outpacing wage growth, meanwhile, has not changed, posing a challenge for the Bank of Japan, which has signalled it would continue interest rate hikes through this year.
Labour ministry data showed inflation-adjusted real wages, a key barometer of consumer purchasing power, fell 2.8% in November from a year earlier. That matched a decline in January, which had marked the sharpest drop since a September 2023 figure of 2.9%.
The November number was also worse than a revised 0.8% fall in October and extended a losing streak for the 11th straight month.
BONUS DATA WEIGHS ON WAGES, INFLATION REMAINS HIGH
In a similar vein, average nominal wages, or total cash earnings, rose at the slowest pace since December 2021, edging up just 0.5% from a year earlier to 310,202 yen ($1,983).
Both statistics were influenced by a 17% plunge in special payments - mostly one-time bonuses - an indicator that tends to be volatile outside of summer and winter bonus months.
A labour ministry official said special payment figures in November tend to be lower at a preliminary stage, since few firms' winter bonus data are reflected at that point.
The official added that the wage environment remains unchanged overall. Regular pay, or base salary, rose 2.0%, slightly slower than October's 2.4% growth pace but matching September's. Overtime pay, a gauge of private-sector strength, gained 1.2%, worse than a 2.1% rise in October but better than September's 1%.
The rise in consumer prices, however, remained high at 3.3%. The inflation rate the ministry uses to calculate the headline real wage indicator includes fresh food prices but not rent costs, and it tends to be higher than the core rate.
The Bank of Japan raised its policy rate to a 30-year high of 0.75% from 0.5% last month, judging that firms would continue to raise wages steadily this year through annual labour-management talks.
The country's biggest union group, Rengo, is targeting an increase in overall pay of at least 5% this year.
($1 = 156.4300 yen)
(Reporting by Satoshi Sugiyama; Editing by Joe Bavier)








