KEY POINTS
  • BOJ Governor Kazuo Ueda had repeatedly said these talks would be key to sustainable price increases that would inform any decision to hike rates for the first time in 17 years.
  • BOJ policymakers expect higher salaries to lead to a virtuous spiral with domestic demand fueling inflation.
  • The decision Tuesday sparked a sharp selloff in the Japanese yen, which dived to its weakest since 2008 against the euro and hit a four-month low against the dollar.
Neon advertisements in Osaka's Dotonbori district in Japan

Japan's central bank on Tuesday finally ended its experiment with negative rates and unconventional easing tools which were aimed at reflating the world's fourth-largest economy.

The Bank of Japan's decision came just days after Rengo, Japan's largest federation of trade unions, said ongoing "shunto" wage negotiations between Japan Inc and unionized employees have so far yielded a provisional weighted average 3.7% spike in base pay. This was even more robust than last year's gains, which were the steepest in three decades.