Japan's business services inflation hits eight-year high in fiscal 2022

Japan's business services inflation hits eight-year high in fiscal 2022

Business

The data came after top companies agreed to their largest pay increases

TOKYO (Reuters) - Japan's business-to-business service inflation hit an eight-year high in the fiscal year that ended March, data showed on Tuesday, a sign inflationary pressure was broadening beyond goods reflecting a tight job market and solid domestic demand.

The data may keep alive market expectations that new Bank of Japan (BOJ) Governor Kazuo Ueda will phase out the bank's massive stimulus programme in coming months.

The services producer price index, which measures the prices companies charge each other for services, rose 1.8 per cent in fiscal 2022, higher than a 1.2 per cent increase in the previous year, BOJ data showed on Tuesday. It was the fastest pace of increase since fiscal 2014, when it rose 3.3 per cent.

In March, the index rose 1.6 per cent from a year ago, marking the 25th straight month of year-on-year increase, the data showed. It followed a revised 1.7 per cent gain in February.

The gain in March was driven largely by a rebound in inbound and domestic tourism with hotel fees up 32.4 per cent from a year earlier, reflecting the government's removal of COVID-19 curbs, the data showed.

The data came after top companies agreed to their largest pay increases in a quarter century in annual labour talks with unions in March, a sign the country may be finally shaking off the public's sticky deflationary mindset.