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By Although retail sales, a barometer of service-sector activity and consumer spending, rose more than expected, the faltering factory activity is ill-timed as companies face calls to hike wages to sustain " Industrial output fell 0.1% in December from the previous month, government data showed on Tuesday. The drop was less than the median market forecast for a 1.2% decrease and followed upwardly-revised 0.2% growth in November. Outputs of items related to capital expenditure such as general machinery and metal products, which dropped 6.0% and 3.0%, respectively, dragged down the overall December index. Output of auto products was up 0.6%, posting first growth in two months. Compared with the previous quarter, factory output fell 3.1% in October-December, the first drop in two quarters. The fall was biggest since April-June 2020's 16.8% decline, when the impact of the pandemic first fully hit the world's third-largest economy. Graphic: Factory output drops slightly https://www.reuters.com/graphics/JAPAN-ECONOMY/OUTPUT/gkplwdmowvb/chart.jpg Manufacturers surveyed by the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (METI) expect output to remain flat in January and increase 4.1% in February, the data also showed, although the official poll tends to report an optimistic outlook. Separate data showed on Tuesday Japanese retail sales rose 3.8% in December from a year earlier, beating a median market forecast for a 3.0% gain and its tenth straight month of expansion. The jobless rate stayed unchanged at 2.5% in December, another official data showed. Jobs-to-applicants ratio, a gauge of job availability, was also flat from the previous month that posted the highest reading since With a tightening labour market, 41-year-high consumer inflation and policymakers' pleas, more than half of big Japanese companies are planning to raise wages this year, a Reuters survey showed this month. Yet the small companies that provide most of "Rising raw material costs are increasingly tormenting small companies, who are willing to raise workers' wages but must be realistic about their bottom line amid a cost squeeze," said Shinkin's Tsunoda. "Pay hikes won't prevail outside of big firms, so the monetary policy should stay easy." (Reporting by
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