Employees assemble turbo engines for Toyota’s Lexus NX crossover sport-utility vehicle on the production line at a plant in Kanda, Fukuoka Prefecture. Workers at the auto firm plan to ask the management to increase base wages by less than 2%.


Bloomberg/Tokyo



Workers at Toyota Motor Corp plan to ask Japan’s largest company to increase base wages by less than 2%, casting doubt on the ability of labour unions to secure pay gains needed to jumpstart the economy.
The Toyota Motor Workers’ Union plans to propose a ¥6,000 ($50) increase in monthly base wages for the fiscal year beginning in April, Yasuyuki Takagi, a spokesman, said by phone. That’s equal to a raise of about 1.7% for the union’s 63,000 workers. The union makes its formal request to Toyota next week.
The modest demands show why economists are pessimistic that Prime Minister Shinzo Abe can get Japan Inc to boost wages by as much as the central bank is targeting prices to rise. Abe is counting on exporters led by Toyota – which is making more profit than all other Japanese automakers combined – to return the favour after his policies weakened the yen and boosted the value of earnings from overseas.
“Japanese car producers are sitting on a large scale of cash and the yen weakened sharply last year, so there are reasons for them to raise wages for their staff,” said Betty Rui Wang, an economist at Standard Chartered. Japanese companies may give raises of 1 to 2% in annual wage negotiations that take place around springtime, which won’t be enough to support or boost inflation, she said by phone.
Toyota executives said the company was considering ways to help Japan escape deflation after raising its fiscal-year profit forecast to a record ¥2.13tn. The manufacturer may ease up on its practice of squeezing suppliers to lower prices of auto parts in hopes of giving smaller suppliers the resources to boost their workers’ wages.
Toyota has lifted its earnings forecast in each of the last two quarters. Its current projection for ¥2.13tn this fiscal year exceeds the combined ¥1.8tn that analysts estimate Japan’s seven other carmakers will report, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
“We understand we are at very important phase for the Japanese economy,” managing officer Koki Konishi told reporters on February 4. “We think it is important to have economic revitalisation to penetrate second- and third-tier suppliers and for the whole Japanese economy to set a positive attitude.”Toyota’s union plans to request bonuses equivalent to 6.8 months of salary and a ¥7,300 average pay increase for seniority or promotions, said Takagi, the union spokesman. Both are unchanged from last year.
While Japanese consumers saw their first base wage increase in eight years in 2014, those gains were outpaced by rising living costs and an increase in the sales tax in April. Average earnings climbed 0.8%, while pay adjusted for inflation fell 2.5%, the labour ministry said on February 4.   In negotiations across 43 union groups last year, companies agreed to increase base wages by an average of ¥1,950 a month, the Japanese Trade Union Confederation said in March. The nation’s biggest union group, known as Rengo, said raises were the biggest since at least the turn of the century.
Those gains weren’t enough to keep Japan from slipping into its fourth recession since 2008 last year, following the sales- tax increase. The Bank of Japan, led by Abe’s hand-picked Governor Haruhiko Kuroda, has responded by expanding on unprecedented monetary stimulus that has driven down the value of the yen.
Wage increases this year will probably exceed last year’s raise, while still trailing the BoJ’s 2% inflation target, Colin Asher, senior economist at Mizuho Bank, wrote in a January 21 report.
Japan will struggle to meet the inflation target by the end of March 2016, said Wang, the Standard Chartered economist. The BoJ may need to extend its monetary easing at least an additional year and increase annual asset purchases to as much as ¥100tn, she said.
“These negotiations are a very important factor to keeping the inflation cycle going for Japan, a country with a lot of pessimism and long-term deflation,” Wang said. “Wage growth will definitely help consumers to spend their money, but even 2% I don’t think is enough.”