Japan's Female Scheduled Wages Rise 204% Over 45 Years
Average monthly scheduled cash earnings for women rose from 88,500 yen in 1975 to 269,000 yen in 2019, but growth stalled in the 2000s.
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Portal Site of Official Statistics of Japan website (https://www.e-stat.go.jp/).
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from Japan Japan's female workers saw their average monthly scheduled cash earnings more than triple over four and a half decades, climbing from 88,500 yen in 1975 to 269,000 yen in 2019, according to data from the Statistics Bureau of Japan compiled via the e-Stat portal.
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The 204 per cent increase, however, masks a prolonged stagnation during the 2000s that meant real take-home pay barely budged for years.
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After steady rises through the bubble economy of the 1980s pushed monthly pay above 200,000 yen by 1992, the series hit a wall.
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Between 1998 and 2012, the average regularly paid wage for women hovered in a narrow band around 240,000 yen, dipping in 2005 to 239,000 yen and again in 2006 to 238,600 yen before edging back up.
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The global financial crisis did not cause a sharp fall — the 2009 reading of 243,200 yen actually ticked fractionally higher — but the flat trend overall is consistent with Japan’s “Lost Decades” of deflation and sluggish labour demand.
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The upward tilt only returned after 2013, with wages adding about 25,000 yen in the final seven years of the series to reach their peak in 2019.
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For labour economists, the prolonged flatline also carries a gender dimension.
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Average monthly scheduled cash earnings for women rose from 88,500 yen in 1975 to 269,000 yen in 2019, but growth stalled in the 2000s.