TOKYO: Japan’s average minimum wage is set to rise at a record pace in the current fiscal year ending in March 2023 as global commodity inflation pushes up households' living costs, the Nikkei newspaper reported today.

A health ministry committee recommended yesterday that the country’s average minimum wage be raised by ¥31, or 3.3%, from the current level to ¥961 (RM32.33) per hour, the Nikkei reported.

The committee, comprising management and labour union representatives as well as academics, makes the recommendation each year that serves as the nationwide standard for minimum wages.

The government sets a goal to raise the median average minimum wage at ¥1,000 or higher “at the earliest date possible.”

Boosting wage growth has been a key policy priority for Prime Minister Fumio Kishida, as he seeks to redistribute wealth and cushion the blow to households from rising fuel and food costs blamed on the war in Ukraine.

Japan’s core consumer prices rose 2.2% in June from a year earlier, a much slower pace than in many Western economies but remaining above the central bank’s target for a third straight month. – Reuters