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Marcos says national gov’t to assist in Western Visayas power distribution problem

BW FILE PHOTO

PRESIDENT Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. said the national government will help resolve the power distribution issues in Western Visayas following power outages in the regions Panay and Negros islands since Friday.   

“Negros and Panay islands are the ones having problems now. The irony is Negros actually has a surplus of power supply,” the president told reporters onboard a plane en route to Washington, based on a Palace-supplied transcript released on Monday.  

“The reason why theres a brownout is because of the distribution system in the high-tension wire,he said partly in Filipino. So thats what we will have to look into.”  

The countrys power transmission system is operated by the National Grid Corporation of the Philippines (NGCP), a privately-owned consortium composed of Monte Oro Grid Resources Corp., Calaca High Power Corp., and the State Grid Corporation of China as technical partner.  

When asked whether the national government would take over power distribution in the area, Mr. Marcos said: I wont take over anything. Well augment on the distribution side because that has been the problem.”  

The president said what the government was initially looking into was how to get the surplus power out of Negros into the rest of the Visayas because theyre at a net loss, a net undersupply.” 

But suddenly, this comes up and it turns out its because of the distribution system not the power supply.” 

Western Visayas is composed of Negros Occidental in Negros island; Aklan, Antique, Capiz, and Iloilo in Panay; and the island province of Guimaras. The regional center is Iloilo City, one of the fastest growing urban areas in the country.   

The region suffered a major power outage over the weekend, starting with a total blackout in the entire Panay and Guimaras islands on Friday.  

The Department of Energy on Sunday said the power interruptions in Panay may continue indefinitely as the NGCP was still working on the full recovery of the islands grid. Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza 

Cordillera farmers to be brought into Paleng-QR digital payment program 

THE BANGKO Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) has partnered with the Department of Agriculture (DA) in the Cordillera region to onboard farmers and other agricultural players in the Paleng-QR Ph Plus program.   

Under the BSP-DA Cordillera agreement signed on April 18 in Baguio City, the government-led digital payment program will be piloted to the farm sector.  

The Cordillera Administrative Region, home of rice terraces listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site, is a major producer of vegetables and various high-value crops.  

The Paleng-QR Ph Plus program, which utilizes quick response (QR) technology, is intended to promote cashless transactions in public markets and local transportation.    

BSP Deputy Governor Bernadette Romulo-Puyat said the central bank aims for a more widespread adoption of QR Ph among farmers, who play big roles in the agricultural and public markets supply chains.    

DA-Cordillera Regional Executive Director Cameron P. Odsey said the collaboration with the central bank allows farmers to access digital services, making them more adept and responsive to modern technology.   

The MOA (memorandum of agreement) expands the scope of Paleng-QR Ph participants from Baguio Citys public market vendors, public transport drivers, and other merchants who joined the program in August last year, to now include the regions agricultural supply chain players,the BSP said.    

The Paleng-QR Ph Plus program was jointly developed by the Philippine central bank and the Department of the Interior and Local Government.   

It also seeks to onboard local government units to push for the acceptance of digital payments among market vendors, community shopkeepers, and tricycle operators and drivers in all cities and municipalities in the country. Keisha B. Ta-asan   

Communist force in Soccsksargen continues to wane as 3 high-ranking leaders surrender

JOHN M. UNSON

THREE high-ranking leaders of the armed communist movement surrendered Friday in Sultan Kudarat, the latest in a string of top officials giving up arms in the Soccsksargen region in southern Philippines.    

Police and military authorities said the three officials of the New Peoples Army (NPA), the armed wing of the Communist Party of the Philippines, vowed to help convince other officers and members to yield too.  

Philippine Army 6th Infantry Division commander Alex S. Rillera said the three men handed over assault rifles, a pistol and explosives before they formally renounced their membership from the NPA during a surrender ceremony with security forces.  

John Paul D. Baldomar of the Armys 37th Infantry Battalion, who was among those who interceded for the former rebels, said one of them was a self-styledleader of an NPA unit in the region.   

The two other surrenderers led big groups tagged in the burning of heavy equipment of construction companies involved in high-ticket government infrastructure projects whose owners refused to shell out protection money.” 

Records from the Police Regional Office-12 or Soccsksargen and the military show 29 senior NPA leaders and 357 members from different towns in the central Mindanao area had surrendered since 2020.  

Soccsksargen is composed of the provinces of South Cotabato, Cotabato, Sultan Kudarat, Sarangani, and General Santos City. John M. Unson 

Outdated regulations continue to impede Philippines’ digital readiness — experts

A WOMAN in a remote meeting via videoconference works from her living room. — REUTERS

The information and telecommunications technology (ICT) sector needs more reforms and updated regulations to boost inclusive digital connectivity, according to experts.

“In a dynamic sector such as ICT, there is a need to upgrade the regulatory framework for telecommunications, which underpins the digital economy,”  Ramonette B. Serafica, Philippine Institute for Development Studies (PIDS) senior research fellow, said during a webinar on April 27.

“There is a need to bring the telecommunications policies to the 21st century,” she added.

The digital economy contributed 9.4% or P 2.08 trillion to the country’s gross domestic product in 2022, growing by 11% from P1.87 trillion in 2021, according to the Philippine Statistics Authority. 

Meanwhile, only 17.7% of households in the Philippines were connected to the internet in 2019 — roughly four in every five households excluded from participating in the digital economy.

Households in the capital region are seven times more likely to have internet access than those in the Bangsamoro region in Mindanao.

The congressional franchise requirement for telco providers, as stated in Section 16 of Republic Act 7925 or the Public Telecommunications Policy Act, is a key challenge to building a new regulatory ICT framework, according to experts. 

National Economic and Development Authority Undersecretary Krystal Lyn T. Uy said that the law has only partially liberalized the telco sector and lacks policies that enable a conducive environment for new competitors. 

“The Philippines remains the only country in the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) region that requires such a franchise. Other countries have moved toward an open access model, allowing competition in all segments of the internet network,” she said.

“[O]btaining and renewing a franchise, which is inherently a political process, contributes to uncertainty and increases the risks of investing in the digital infrastructure in the Philippines,” a PIDS study noted. 

Moreover, the complex, multilayered internet value chain of the country, akin to the convergence of local and international companies, contributes to the difficulty in lobbying for regulation, said Queen Cel A. Oren, PIDS research specialist.  

The Philippines currently has the third most expensive ICT service across all ICT price baskets among ASEAN states, according to the International Telecommunication Union. Internet connectivity through broadband networks is the value chain’s most critical element, Ms. Oren said. 

Telco firms push prices higher due to an increase in operations cost and the amount of processes and requirements, given outdated laws and guidelines, noted Mary Grace Mirandilla-Santos, Better Internet PH’s lead advocate and Secure Connections’ ICT policy analyst.

“[Outside of Metro Manila], for instance, operators that need to lay fiber cables through several municipalities are required to apply for a certificate even if they do not intend to sell services in these municipalities,” she said. 

A simplified licensing process widens the spaces for telco providers to grow and digital infrastructure to expand in the country, she said. 

Ms. Uy said that stakeholders must “support the regulatory changes that must be done in the [ICT] industry.” 

While such legal amendments will take time, former National Telecommunications Commission Deputy Commissioner Edgardo V. Cabarios noted that the Department of Information and Communications can issue policy guidelines addressing the current gaps, alongside providing broadband access to missionary, geographically isolated, and disadvantaged areas.

Mr. Cabarios also said that the broadband access can be funded by a portion of the collected spectrum user fees. 

“This way, we can move forward, make the sector more competitive, and reduce the cost of services,” he said.

According to Ms. Uy, the regulating authority of the NTC needs to be “modernized and equipped with stronger powers to recall and reassign unused and underused spectrum,” given that the Radio Control Law of the Philippines or Act No. 3846 has been in place for 92 years. — Miguel Hanz L. Antivola

Weightlifting young guns brace for busy May competition slate

VANESSA SARNO — PHILIPPINE STAR/JUN MENDOZA

RISING young weightlifting star Vanessa Sarno and Tokyo Olympian Elreen Ando will try to kill two birds with one stone as they shoot for Paris Olympics qualifying points in the Asian Championships in Jinju, South Korea and Southeast Asian Games gold medal in Phnom Penh in the span of a week this month.

Ms. Sarno, 19, and Ms. Ando, 24, are both scheduled to see action in Jinju on May 3-9 and in the 32nd edition of the biennial meet in the Cambodian capital where they are slated to plunge into action from May 13 to 16.

Ms. Sarno, the cheerful Tagbiliran, Bohol native, has been living up to expectations as Tokyo Olympics gold winner Hidilyn Diaz’s heiress apparent after topping the Asian Championships in Tashkent, Uzbekistan three years ago at 16 years old and last year’s Hanoi Games in the -71-kilogram class.

She is expected to try to replicate those same feats especially in Jinju where she has a chance to earn qualifying points to next year’s Paris Olympics.

Ms. Diaz will also compete in Jinju where she will battle Ando in the 59 kg division while deciding to skip the Phnom Penh event to preserve her energy to seek a second Olympic gold in Paris.

To qualify for Paris, Samahang Weightlifting ng Pilipinas president Monico Puentevella said they would need to participate in at least five Olympic qualifying events and earn the necessary points.

Ms. Diaz and Ms. Ando went through the same process in securing their spots in the 55 kg and 59 kg division, respectively, to the 2021 Tokyo Games where the former delivered the country’s first Olympic gold.

But since Ms. Diaz’s category was scrapped, she was forced to climb up to the next weight class that Ms. Ando was in.

“Hidilyn and Elreen Ando will compete in the Asian Championship and try to earn qualifying points to the Paris Olympics in the same weight class on May 7,” said Mr. Puentevella.

“Unfortunately, only one per country per event can qualify to the Olympics,”

Also competing in Jinju are John Ceniza and the young and talented Ramos sisters Rosegie and Rose Jean. — Joey Villar

La Salle goes for second win, faces San Beda in D-League Aspirants’ Cup

PBA MEDIA

Games Today
2 p.m. — University of Perpetual Help System Dalta vs PSP Gymers
4 p.m. — Marinerong Pilipino-San Beda vs EcoOil-La Salle

TITLE holder EcoOil-La Salle, missing key players on national team duty, shoots for a second straight win against revenge-seeking Marinerong Pilipino-San Beda in the PBA D-League Aspirants’ Cup today at the Ynares Sports Arena in Pasig City.

Tip-off is at 4 p.m. for the main match between two collegiate heavyweights after the opening act of PSP Gymers and University of Perpetual Help System Dalta at 2 p.m.

La Salle marches into duel without Mike and Ben Phillips, who are fulfilling national duties with Gilas Pilipinas in a closed-door camp at the Inspire Sports Academy in Calamba, Laguna for the 32nd Southeast Asian Games this week.

But even without the Phillips brothers, the Green Archers have more than enough manpower to stand their ground against the Red Lions with other core players Evan Nelle, Kevin Quiambao and Mark Nonoy at the helm.

“We will be shorthanded but we will come prepared. We know San Beda’s potential and we have a lot of respect for coach Yuri Escueta and his staff. We’ll be prepared for them,” said deputy Gian Nazario.

Mr. Nazario for now is steering the Green Archers in place of head coach Topex Robinson, who’s in the US to scout prospects. Last week, Mr. Nazario towed La Salle to an 84-62 win over Centro Escolar University to kick off their back-to-back title bid on a high note.

On the other hand, the Red Lions eye no less than a sweet rebound coming off a 94-92 collapse against the neophyte PSP after leading by double digits in the payoff period.

Yukien Andrada, Jacob Cortez and Clifford Jopia are out to lead San Beda’s upset bid to dodge an early 0-2 hole in the seven-team D-League cast. — John Bryan Ulanday

China’s Ding Liren defies odds to become world champion

DING LIREN — FRANS PEETERS

China’s Ding Liren was crowned on Sunday as the 17th world chess champion in a tense match against Russian-born Ian Nepomniachtchi in Astana, Kazakhstan, in the last chapter of an odds-defying sequence of events.

Thirty-year-old Mr. Ding won the rapid chess playoff by 2.5 points to 1.5, capitalizing on Mr. Nepomniachtchi’s mistakes in time trouble in the last of the shorter-format games, following the pair’s 7-7 tie in a psychological battle across 14 longer “classical” games.

“One Ding to rule em all,” fellow grandmaster Anish Giri wrote on Twitter in honor of the new champion.

Mr. Ding’s triumph means China holds both the men’s and women’s world titles, with current women’s champion Ju Wenjun set to defend her title against compatriot Lei Tingjie in July.

“The moment Ian resigned the game was a very emotional moment, I cannot control my feelings,” the new world champion said in a news conference.

Mr. Ding had leveled the score in the regular portion of the match with a dramatic win in game 12, despite several critical moments — including a purported leak of his own preparation.

The Chinese grandmaster takes the crown from five-time world champion Magnus Carlsen of Norway, who defeated Mr. Nepomniachtchi in 2021 but announced in July he would not defend the title again this year.

Mr. Carlsen said he was not motivated to play shortly after Mr. Nepomniachtchi won the Candidates tournament, the prestigious qualifier to the match.

Mr. Ding, runner-up in the Candidates thanks to an incredible second half of the event, was next in line. He had only been invited to the tournament at the last minute to replace Russia’s Sergey Karjakin, whom the international chess federation (FIDE) banned for his vocal support of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Mr. Ding ranks third in the FIDE rating list behind Mr. Carlsen and Mr. Nepomniachtchi. The new champion will attend from May 4 the first tournament of the Grand Chess Tour in Bucharest, Romania, after being almost inactive since 2020 due to COVID-19 lockdowns in China. — Reuters

Curry scores Game 7-record 50; Warriors advance

STEPHEN CURRY set a Game 7 scoring record with 50 points and the Golden State Warriors kept their championship-repeat dreams alive with a 120-100 road win over the Sacramento Kings on Sunday afternoon.

By virtue of their 19th consecutive playoff-series triumph over Western Conference competition, the sixth-seeded Warriors not only earned the right to take on the seventh-seeded Los Angeles Lakers in the second round, but also have the home-court advantage in the best-of-seven.

The series is set to tip off Tuesday in San Francisco. The third-seeded Kings, who were making their first postseason appearance in 17 years, had the home-court edge over the Warriors, but Golden State won Games 5 and 7 at Sacramento after two earlier home victories to advance.

Riding 16 points from Domantas Sabonis, Sacramento led 58-56 at halftime before Golden State flashed its championship form over the final 24 minutes. It began with a 35-23 third-quarter edge fueled by Mr. Curry’s 14 points and Klay Thompson’s nine. It also included a 22-9 advantage in rebounds in the period.

Down 10 entering the final quarter, the Kings mounted no charge, missing their first five shots and mixing in a turnover. By the time De’Aaron Fox ended a 3:37 Sacramento drought, the Golden State lead had expanded to 12 as time slipped away.

Mr. Curry’s 50 points were three more than he’d ever scored in a playoff game, and two more than the 48 Kevin Durant put up against the Milwaukee Bucks in a Brooklyn Nets Game 7 loss in the 2021 Eastern semifinals.

Mr. Curry made 20 of his career-high 38 shots overall and 7-for-18 on 3-point tries. Andrew Wiggins finished with 17 points. Thompson scored 16 in a 4-for-19 shooting effort, and Kevon Looney had 11 points and 21 rebounds.

Mr. Looney did most of his damage on the offensive glass, with 10 of his 21 boards coming off teammates’ misses. Golden State outrebounded the hosts 55-49 overall and 18-14 at the offensive end.

Returning to the starting lineup, Draymond Green chipped in with eight points, six rebounds, two steals and a game-high eight assists.

Making 10 of his 16 shots, Mr. Sabonis led the Kings with 22 points to complement eight rebounds and a team-high seven assists. Mr. Fox had 16 points on a 5-for-19 shooting afternoon, reserves Terence Davis and Malik Monk 14 apiece and Keegan Murray 10 for Sacramento, which shot just 12-for-47 from 3-point range, getting outscored 45-36 from beyond the arc. Kevin Huerter grabbed a team-high nine rebounds to go with seven points and two blocks. — Reuters

Jimmy Butler, Heat open semifinals with win at Knicks 

JIMMY Butler totaled 25 points and 11 rebounds and hobbled through the final five minutes as the visiting Miami Heat rallied for a 108-101 victory over the New York Knicks on Sunday afternoon in Game 1 of their Eastern Conference semifinal series.

After scoring 42 points to help the eighth-seeded Heat rally from 16 down to close out Milwaukee in Game 5 on Wednesday, Butler was 8 of 16 from the floor and 9 of 11 from the foul line in 44 minutes, including the final minutes on a bad leg.

With 5:05 left and Miami up 95-92, Mr. Butler fell to the floor after being fouled by Josh Hart. He was holding his ankle and rolled over on his stomach after his right foot went under Mr. Hart’s leg.

Mr. Butler hobbled to the bench and returned gingerly before making both free throws. The Heat then finished it off when Kyle Lowry hit a baseline jumper for a 104-94 lead with 2:53 left.

Gabe Vincent hit five of Miami’s 13 3-pointers and added 20 points. Mr. Lowry added 18 points and six assists off the bench, while Bam Adebayo contributed 16 points and eight boards as Miami shot 42.4 percent.

Game 2 is Tuesday night in New York.

RJ Barrett led all scorers with 26 points, but the Knicks were held to 40 points in the final 22-plus minutes and blew a 12-point lead midway through the second quarter. Jalen Brunson added 25 and Obi Toppin finished with 18 as the Knicks shot 47.7 percent and missed 27 of 34 3-point attempts.

Julius Randle, New York’s leading scorer in the regular season, missed the game with a sprained left ankle that he originally injured March 29 and reinjured Wednesday in Cleveland.

He worked out on the floor pregame before the Knicks announced he would sit out.

Mr. Barrett scored 11 as the Knicks outscored Miami 17-5 over the final 5:02 for a 32-21 lead after one quarter. New York took a 40-28 lead on Mr. Brunson’s layup with 7:30 left in the second quarter and settled for a 55-50 halftime lead after Adebayo sank a foul-line jumper right before the horn.

Miami ripped off a 21-5 run, and consecutive hoops by Mr. Butler opened a 74-66 lead with 5:34 left in the third. After the Knicks moved within 74-72 on Mr. Brunson’s basket with 4:33 left, the Heat took an 81-75 lead into the fourth. — Reuters

Embiid ‘doubtful for at least Game 1’

STAR center Joel Embiid likely will not be on the floor when the Philadelphia 76ers open their Eastern Conference semifinal series Monday against the Boston Celtics, coach Doc Rivers announced Saturday.

Mr. Embiid dealt with knee soreness in Game 3 of Philadelphia’s first-round series versus the sixth-seeded Brooklyn Nets. He then sat out Game 4, although the third-seeded 76ers were able to complete the sweep of the best-of-seven set with a 96-88 victory on April 22.

Additional tests revealed that the MVP finalist is dealing with a sprained LCL in his right knee.

Mr. Rivers didn’t sound overly enthused about the prospect of Mr. Embiid playing in the series opener against the second-seeded Celtics when asked about the latest news on his star. “There is no latest. Obviously, doctors looked at him. He didn’t do anything today,” Mr. Rivers said. “I’ll say this; If I was a betting man, I would probably say doubtful for at least Game 1, but we’ll see.”

Mr. Embiid averaged 20.0 points, 11.3 rebounds and 2.3 blocks in three games against the Nets. He led the NBA in scoring during the regular season at 33.1 points per game. Mr. Embiid, 29, played in 66 games during the regular season, two shy of his career high set during the 2021-22 season. — Reuters

PHL competitors trickle into Cambodia

TEAM Philippines continues to arrive in Cambodia for the 32nd Southeast Asian Games, following in the footsteps of compatriots with earlier scheduled matches.

Some 128 members of the 840-strong Filipino contingent are set to board a Philippine Airlines flight to Phnom Penh flight today to join competitors in chess, football, cricket and hockey, who have already taken the field in Cambodia.

A further batch of 113 is embarking tomorrow with another group set to fly out the following day ahead of Friday’s opening ceremonies at the Cambodian capital.

The Philippine Olympic Committee (POC) said it has completed distribution of national team kit in time for departure. According to the POC, 1,200 sets of track suits, tech shirts, socks, backpacks, caps, shoes, towels, string bags, shorts and luggage were delivered to the national sports associations over the weekend.

The additional athletes join the Azkals Under-22 and indoor hockey teams, which are seeking to bounce back from opening losses.

The U22 Azkals, who lost 0-3 to Indonesia Saturday, gun for a crucial win against Cambodia tonight before an expected packed home crowd at the National Olympic Stadium. The Cambodians are coming off a 4-0 win over Timor Leste, a major confidence-booster ahead of their 7 p.m. duel with the Filipinos.

The men’s and women’s indoor hockey squads take on opponents from Malaysia today at the Dinosaur Park Hall. They both bowed to Thailand in yesterday’s opener, 8-0 in the women’s division and 14-0 in the men’s side.

Pinay cricketers also fell to Thailand in the curtain-raiser of the women’s T20 event at the AZ Group Cricket Oval.

The chess team experienced contrasting fates in ouk chaktrang or Cambodian chess at the Royal University of Phnom Penh.

Woman Grandmaster Janelle Frayna and WIM Shania Mae Mendoza defeated Thailand’s Sarocha Chuemsakul and Sirikan Sukpancharoen, 1-0, to stay unbeaten in women’s doubles 60-minute after three rounds.

But GMs Darwin Laylo, Eugene Torre and Joey Antonio lost to Vietnam’s Nam Thang Huang, Quoc Dung Tran and The Anh Duong in Round 1 of the men’s triples 60-minute competition. — Olmin Leyba

Inflation, labor crunch prodding Japan’s smaller firms to raise pay

REUTERS

TOKYO — Rising inflation and an intensifying labor crunch are prodding smaller local Japanese firms to follow their big counterparts in raising pay, a move that can generate broader wage hikes and encourage the central bank to phase out its massive stimulus.

Wages have barely risen in Japan since the asset bubble burst in the 1990s but have crept up recently, as companies face pressure to compensate employees for the rising cost of living.

Importantly, smaller firms are also starting to raise pay even though many of them face a margin crunch. A durable rise in wages is an important consideration for policymakers who seek to foster sustainable demand-driven inflation in the world’s third-largest economy before starting to unwind monetary stimulus.

Huis Ten Bosch Co. is just the kind of company that policymakers would want to see more of to stimulate a virtuous cycle of wages, prices and economic growth.

The theme park operator in southern Japan unveiled a plan last month to hike pay by 6% in the financial year 2024 — a rare move to preempt wage hikes for the next year.

“Customers have returned to pre-pandemic levels. Moreover, we want to give staff a sense of security in the face of rising living costs,” Yu Ito, spokesperson at the park operator’s president office, told Reuters.

“We want to keep the positive momentum going.”

Nearly 60% of Japan’s small and medium enterprises (SMEs) plan to lift wages this year with about 20% aiming for a hike by 4% or more, a survey by the Japan Chamber of Commerce and Industry showed in March.

Even those unable to hike basic pay sought to compensate employees with higher bonus payment.

Suzette Holdings Co., a high-end confectionary maker in the western city of Ashiya, which runs more than 100 shops nationwide, has offered a bonus this year that is 1.3 times the average of the previous two years as sales returned to pre-COVID levels.

“We want to reward employees by raising wages for as long as possible so that we can attract talent,” company president Goki Arita said.

Big firms offered pay hikes of 3.8% this year in annual wage talks with unions that ended in March, the largest increase in three decades. Attention has now shifted to whether small firms, which employ seven out of 10 workers in Japan, would follow suit.

Bank of Japan (BoJ) officials have said the outcome of small firms’ wage talks, which will get into full swing towards June, will be key to whether Japan will see durable pay hikes to enable it to phase out its massive monetary stimulus.

“Many regions said wage hikes were broadening, even among small and mid-sized firms due to intensifying job shortages and rising inflation,” the BoJ said in a summary of a meeting of its regional branch managers earlier last month.

NOT ALL ON BOARD
There is uncertainty, however, on whether SMEs can keep raising pay. The BoJ’s tankan business sentiment survey showed last month that small firms’ current profits fell 2.7% in the last fiscal year to March, while big firms’ earnings rose 11.5%.

Hosei University Professor Hisashi Yamada, an expert on labor issues, said the wage hikes may turn out to be temporary, “therefore, the central bank may wait to see until next year and beyond to do anything drastic on policy.”

The jobless rate remained tight at a three-decade low of 2.3% on average in 2023, according to data by the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

Per-capita labor productivity is estimated at 5 million yen ($37,408.35) for SMEs, far less than big firms’ 12 million yen, government data showed.

Many Japanese firms face the need to raise wages to retain talent amid dwindling pools of workers in the fast-ageing population, though some may not have the capacity to do so with rising raw material costs crippling their margin.

“Medium-to-long term inflation expectations and ability to pass on costs to bigger firms at higher end of the supply chain are important factors for SMEs to raise wages,” Professor Yamada said.

Less than half of small firms said they were able to pass on rising costs to customers as of last September, government data showed.

A fire-engine maker, Nihon Kikai Kogyo in the western suburban city of Hachioji in Tokyo, is among firms that are struggling with the persistent need to cut prices to win public tender.

The company, mired in the red for two straight years, saw 10 of its roughly 160 workers quit last year due to declining bonus. It hasn’t been able to fill the headcount since then.

“Frankly, I don’t want to see wages declining any more. Once it was cut, it won’t be brought back again,” said Hironobu Yamaguchi, the firm’s union representative. “We will be in the clutch next year.” — Reuters

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