Broadening Price Pressures Evident as Japan’s Corporate Service Inflation Rises

Broadening Price Pressures Evident as Japan’s Corporate Service Inflation Rises

TOKYO, Nov 27 (Reuters) – Japan’s business-to-business‍ service inflation accelerated⁢ in October as a tight job market lifted labour costs, underscoring‍ a broadening of price pressures that could ⁢heighten the chance of⁢ a near-term end to ultra-loose‍ monetary‍ policy.

The services ⁢producer price index, which measures the price companies charge‌ each‍ other‍ for services, rose 2.3% in October from‍ a ⁣year earlier, up from a revised 2.0% gain in September, Bank of Japan (BOJ) data showed ⁤on Monday.

Information and communication, machinery repair⁢ and worker dispatching businesses saw fees increase from year-earlier levels due to higher labour⁢ costs.

A surge in ​inbound tourism drove up hotel fees 49.9%.

The data suggest Japan’s economy ​is making progress towards achieving sustained rises in inflation accompanied by solid wage growth.

BOJ Governor Kazuo Ueda has said inflation has⁢ been driven mostly by⁤ cost-push factors and must shift to a more demand-driven rise in prices backed by⁤ higher wages for the bank to consider normalising its ultra-loose monetary policy.

His remarks have heightened market attention ‍to developments⁣ in services prices,‌ which most vividly reflect wages ⁣pressures companies face in⁣ their⁢ businesses.

With⁤ inflation ⁤having held ‍above the BOJ’s 2% target for more‌ than a year, companies have faced unprecedented pressure⁢ to ⁢compensate‍ employees with pay hikes to retain ‍and lure talent.

Indications from businesses,⁤ unions and economists suggest the labour and cost pressures that had set the stage for this year’s pay hikes – the⁤ largest​ in more than‍ three decades – will persist heading into next year’s key ‍spring wage talks.

A Reuters ‍poll in October showed nearly two-thirds of economists project that the BOJ will end‍ its negative interest rate policy next ‌year.

Reporting by Leika Kihara; Editing by Lisa Shumaker and Edwina Gibbs

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Source‍ from www.reuters.com

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