Japan recorded a 1.9% year-on-year increase in real wages in April, government figures released on Friday showed. The rise in real wage growth coincided with a stronger-than-expected increase in average nominal wages, helping to temper the drop in household spending.
Nominal earnings and components
Average nominal wages, measured as total cash earnings, climbed 3.5% compared with the same month a year earlier, outpacing forecasts of a 3.1% rise. This reading marks the fastest nominal wage growth since December 2024 and follows a revised 3.1% increase in March. Notably, April completes a run in which wage growth exceeded 3% for three consecutive months - the first time that has happened in over 34 years.
Key contributors to the April earnings figure included special payments and overtime pay. Special payments, which principally reflect one-time bonuses, surged 7.4% in April after a revised decline of 0.7% in March. Overtime pay also strengthened, rising 4.2% in April compared with a revised 3.1% gain in March. Those components helped boost overall earnings and supported household purchasing power.
Household spending and consumer behaviour
Separate government data showed household spending fell in April from a year earlier, but the contraction was smaller than market expectations. The decline marked the fifth consecutive month of lower consumer spending.
Policy implications
The combination of firmer wages and relatively resilient spending underpins the outlook for Japanese inflation, according to the data narrative. That dynamic gives the Bank of Japan more rationale to contemplate raising interest rates. The central bank has signalled it will consider a rate increase at a meeting later in the month, citing inflation risks that include higher energy prices driven by the conflict in the Middle East.
Taken together, the April data depict a labour-income backdrop that is supporting consumer purchasing power even as household spending remains in a multi-month decline, and that interplay is being watched closely for its implications on inflation and monetary policy.