Many major Japanese companies agree to full pay hike demands

Many major Japanese companies have agreed in full to unions' pay hike demands in this year's shunto negotiations. Close attention is on whether this momentum will spread to small companies, which employ about 70% of Japan's workers.

According to The Japan Times, many major Japanese companies have fully agreed to pay hike demands from unions during this year's shunto wage negotiations. Companies mentioned include Toyota, Hitachi, Mitsubishi Electric, NEC, Fujitsu, Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, Kawasaki Heavy Industries, and IHI. This development has built momentum for wage increases in the Japanese economy. The article notes close attention on whether this will extend to small companies, which employ about 70% of all workers in Japan.

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Samsung executives and union leaders shaking hands after reaching a wage agreement to avert a strike.
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Samsung Electronics reaches wage deal with union to avert strike

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Samsung Electronics and its largest labor union reached a tentative wage agreement on May 20. The planned 18-day strike starting May 21 has been postponed.

On February 26, 2026, Mazda Motor Corp., Mitsubishi Motors Corp., and Yamaha Motor Co. fully met their unions' demands for monthly wage and annual bonus hikes in this year's shunto spring labor negotiations. The companies will raise monthly wages by ¥19,000, ¥18,000, and ¥19,400 respectively, with bonuses equivalent to 5.1, 5.0, and 5.3 months' pay.

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Japan's largest companies raised capital spending in the final quarter of last year, signaling stronger corporate sentiment. The Finance Ministry reported a 4% rise in spending on goods excluding software compared to the previous quarter. Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi is pushing for more investment in strategic sectors.

Samsung Electronics' union has approved a general strike with 93.1 percent support, demanding bonus reforms and a 7 percent pay raise. This would be the company's second strike since 1969, coinciding with a prosecution probe into insider trading that could pressure shares.

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Die Führer der fünf großen französischen Gewerkschaften hielten am 23. Februar in Paris eine ungewöhnliche Pressekonferenz ab, zwei Tage vor der finalen Verhandlungssitzung zur Arbeitslosenversicherung. Sie bekräftigen ihren Widerstand gegen die Forderungen der Arbeitgeber nach 1 Milliarde Euro Einsparungen pro Jahr. Dieser Schritt zielt darauf ab, die Rechte der Arbeitnehmer vor den erweiterten Vorschlägen der Arbeitgeber zu schützen.

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