Economic news

Japan's Corporate Service Inflation Perks Up in February

TOKYO, March 26 (Reuters) - A key gauge of Japan's service-sector inflation rose 2.7% in February from a ​year earlier, data showed on Thursday, reinforcing the ‌central bank's view that a tight labour market is pushing firms to pass rising costs on to consumers.

The ​Bank of Japan has stressed the need ​to see inflation durably hit its 2% ⁠target driven by rising wages and services ​prices, rather than higher raw material costs, to proceed ​with further interest rate hikes.

The increase in the services producer price index, which tracks the price companies charge each ​other for services, followed a 2.6% gain ​in January, BOJ data showed.

Prices rose for labour-intensive industries such ‌as ⁠hotel and construction work, the data showed, a sign labour shortages were pushing up wages and service-sector inflation.

The BOJ ended a decade-long, massive stimulus ​programme in 2024 ​and in ⁠December raised short-term interest rates to 0.75% on the view Japan was ​on the cusp of durably meeting ​its ⁠2% inflation target.

With consumer inflation having exceeded its 2% target for nearly four years, the central bank ⁠has ​signaled its readiness to keep ​hiking borrowing costs if prices continue to rise steadily accompanied ​by higher wages.

Reporting by Leika Kihara Editing by Shri Navaratnam

Source: Reuters


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