By Leika Kihara
TOKYO (Reuters) – The Bank of Japan is increasingly blaming chronic labour shortages, not stagnant demand, as the main reason for its weak economic activity, a justification it may use to lift interest rates beyond what was initially expected.
From factories to hotels to restaurants, Japanese businesses are struggling to hit full capacity not because they can’t find customers but because they can’t find workers, goes the commentary now emerging more from the central bank.
While the tight labour market is not a new trend, the BOJ’s more vocal concerns about the resulting wage and inflationary pressures mean it will be more inclined to look past economic weakness as it considers raising interest rates further, analysts and policymakers say.
“My view is that … the output gap is already in positive territory in reality and the lack of supply capacity is exerting upward pressure on prices,” Naoki Tamura, a hawkish BOJ board member, said on Thursday.
On paper, Japan’s output gap, which measures whether the economy is running at its full potential, remains slightly negative, suggesting demand lacks momentum to ignite inflation. Coupled with soft consumption, it has been seen by analysts as a factor that could discourage the central bank from raising borrowing costs too much.
But BOJ policymakers are challenging that narrative.
A close look at the BOJ’s quarterly outlook report published in January shows the bank turning more attention to growing signs wage-driven inflation is taking hold due to chronic labour shortages, in turn building the case for sustained, steady rate hikes.
In that report, the BOJ said a dwindling pool of female and elderly workers meant labour market conditions are tightening even amid subdued economic growth.
“In this situation, upward pressure on wages and prices is likely to be stronger than suggested by the output gap, given that firms in many industries have started to face labour supply constraints,” the report said.
The report also analysed how labour-intensive sectors such as construction and services were facing serious worker shortages that were curtailing activity.
The BOJ’s increasing focus on wage-driven inflation is another sign Japan is shedding its 25-year battle with deflation and economic stagnation. It also contrasts with former Governor Haruhiko Kuroda’s insistence on using radical stimulus to fire up inflation.
“The BOJ is becoming more convinced that wages and services prices will keep rising,” said former BOJ top economist Seisaku Kameda, who is now executive economist at Sompo Institute Plus.