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Japan November real wages fall at fastest pace since January

By Thomson Reuters Jan 7, 2026 | 5:33 PM

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)