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Japanese electronics firm Sony said on Thursday it would freeze workers' salaries this year as the company tried to recover from a record loss, and its rivals may follow in the face of a global sales slump.
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Shizuo Kambayashi / AP |
Unemployment is rising in Japan as a slide in exports forces firms to curb production, with the tech sector among the worst hit.
Unlike many Japanese companies, Sony does not automatically raise salaries each year based on seniority. Instead pay rises are set annually for each worker based on their role and performance.
"This time we decided to keep the workers' salaries unchanged," Sony spokeswoman Mami Imada said, ahead of the pay round for the financial year starting next month.
Three other Japanese tech companies -- Toshiba, NEC Corp and Hitachi -- said on Wednesday they were considering similar moves.
The global financial crisis and a strong yen that hit 13-year highs in January is pushing Sony to a projected operating loss of $2.9 billion for the current financial year to March 31.
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Sony's shares dropped 1.4 percent to 1,963 yen on Thursday, underperforming a 0.6 percent fall in the Nikkei 225 Average [NIKKEI
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Sony [SNE
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Imada said Sony workers' bonuses would be cut to four months' pay from six months.







