Central BanksEconomic Calendar

BoJ’s Ueda Notes Broader Wage Gains, Signals Hike Path

Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda signaled that conditions for another rate hike are taking shape, citing accelerating wage growth and a tightening labor market. Speaking at the Fed’s Jackson Hole symposium on Saturday, Ueda said Japan’s long stretch of stagnant pay was rooted in “entrenched deflationary expectations,” but global inflation post-COVID disrupted that equilibrium. “Notably, wage growth is spreading from large enterprises to small and medium enterprises,” he said, adding that “barring a major negative demand shock, the labor market is expected to remain tight and continue to exert upward pressure on wages.” Ueda pointed to rising labor mobility and demographic-driven shortages as key forces pushing firms to raise pay. Following its exit from ultra-loose policy last year, the BoJ hiked rates to 0.5% in January, held steady in July, and upgraded its inflation outlook—fueling expectations for another increase later this year.

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