Japan grows more open to foreign workers

Due to population decline

http://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/20...ign-workers-population-declines/#.V-nUGMRHanO

Two aides to Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said the nation is planning to bring in more overseas workers to bolster the shrinking labor force.

Masahiko Shibayama, a lawmaker in Abe’s ruling Liberal Democratic Party who serves as a special adviser to the prime minister, said in an interview in Singapore last week that policies under consideration may result in a doubling of foreign workers in Japan.

“Probably a lot of strategies are going to be adopted in the coming few years,” Shibayama said. “I don’t think it’s a fixed goal of the government but, in my opinion, doubling the number of foreign workers cannot be avoided in this global market situation. We have to make a sustainable system for accepting more and more foreign workers.”

Immigration has often been proposed as a solution to Japan’s demographic woes in an aging society with a low birthrate. Abe has vowed to stop the population from falling below 100 million from the current 127 million, though the idea of bringing in more foreign nationals has yet to take root amid concerns about the potential effect on a relatively closed society.

In a separate interview, Yasutoshi Nishimura, an adviser to Abe and former vice economy minister, said the government planned to pass a bill this autumn expanding a foreign “trainee” system under which workers are allowed entry for a limited period and was considering new visa categories for sectors suffering labor shortages.

About 190,000 foreign nationals are currently working in Japan under this system, Nishimura said in his Tokyo office, adding that the new law would allow participants to stay up to five years, up from the current three years.

It also would allow companies to have trainees compose a larger percentage of the workforce and permit them to be employed in a wider range of business sectors. Oversight of the system also will be improved, he said, after criticism over abuse of workers, who are often employed in farming or the textile industry.

There is also discussion of bringing in technology industry workers from India and Vietnam, Nishimura added, as well as talk of creating a new visa category for workers in the country’s rapidly expanding tourism industry.

Shibayama said the expansion of foreign tourism had helped change attitudes toward people from other countries.

“We are receiving a very, very large amount of foreign tourists, and I think that Japanese people are less skeptical about introducing a lot of foreigners in Japan, so the situation will be changing step by step,” he said.
 
Japan treats any foreigners (even Japanese descendants) as complete crab and the companies just treat them like shit and reserve the dirties and dangerous jobs to foreigners.
I doubt it will be attractive to many,especially once otakus discover that they are viciously hated and mocked in Japan.
 
Japan has had foreign workers (factories, not just entertainers and teachers from the West) for decades now. Brazilians, Iranians, Indians, Filipinos, and so on in various professions. They were not huge minority (oxymoron?) populations, but they were there. Brazilians and Filipinos were certainly looked down upon, and all were Gaijin. Never heard about enslavement though.

PubAuditionSign.jpg
 
Well, Japan is gonna need a sexual revolution like the West had during the 60's-70's if they want to keep their population around. Japan's gotta loosen up either way.
Japan is really, really weird when it comes to sex. On one hand it's a country where paying a prostitute to cover you in soap/lube, slide herself all over your naked body, and then fuck you is extremely popular and men will talk openly about it with their friends. It's a country where you can go to special cafes and pay to have someone cuddle with you. It's a country where no-tell motels are designed to stand out like a sore thumb (we're talking medieval-style castles and Santa's workshops) and cater to a wide variety of fetishes.
And on the other hand it's a country where so little sex is going on that the only thing getting fucked is the population numbers.
 
Will these foreign workers, should they remain in the country for an appropriate amount of time and follow all proper immigration practices, eventually be eligible for Japanese citizenship? Under current laws, no one not born in Japan or to two Japanese parents with state-authenticated family registries is not able to become a citizen or vote in any elections.
Actually:
http://www.moj.go.jp/ENGLISH/information/tnl-01.html

Articles 4 & 5.
I don't imagine the process of naturalization is easy, but the same could be said for any country.
According to the Japan Times, about 13,000 people were naturalized in 2010. I can be done, although if it happens on a large scale, I can see the native population not being happy about it.
 
Well, Japan is gonna need a sexual revolution like the West had during the 60's-70's if they want to keep their population around. Japan's gotta loosen up either way.

No because the increase in birth rates occurred before the sexual revolution. Both that, combined with feminism, has lowered the birth rate in Western countries.

What Japan needs to do is provide incentives to increase the birthrate. Things like payment, tax cut, and social reconstruction (encouraging traditional roles, etc.) would increase the birth rate.

Though ultimately, one could argue that a crowded nation like the Japanese could use a reduction in number, and with robotics becoming more popular, they don't need as many people as they did before.
 
What Japan needs to do is provide incentives to increase the birthrate. Things like payment, tax cut, and social reconstruction (encouraging traditional roles, etc.) would increase the birth rate.

Japan's problem is obviously that they're way too progressive and don't encourage traditional roles enough.

:roll:
 
If they adopt a model similar to the Gulf countries (but with less outright slavery), then this could be very good for a lot of people in neighbouring countries. Avg income in Japan is just a hair below the OECD average.

Actually:
http://www.moj.go.jp/ENGLISH/information/tnl-01.html

Articles 4 & 5.
I don't imagine the process of naturalization is easy, but the same could be said for any country.
According to the Japan Times, about 13,000 people were naturalized in 2010. I can be done, although if it happens on a large scale, I can see the native population not being happy about it.

I honestly have no idea how the Japanese would feel about it. Mass immigration is always the easiest thing for people to get butthurt about but I can't think of any other country that's been running at well below replacement rate for decades on end.
 
Japan's problem is obviously that they're way too progressive and don't encourage traditional roles enough.

:roll:

There is a story about a Japanese soldier who surrendered in 1975 and returned to Japan horrified by what it had turned into.

Trying to imply that Japan encourages traditional roles in your post is just being dishonest.

There's nothing "progressive" about it. I guess the proper word you're looking for would be they are way too decadent*.
 
There is a story about a Japanese soldier who surrendered in 1975 and returned to Japan horrified by what it had turned into.

Trying to imply that Japan encourages traditional roles in your post is just being dishonest.

There's nothing "progressive" about it. I guess the proper word you're looking for would be they are way too decadent*.

Don't go full @Brandobaris

Never go full @Brandobaris
 
If Japanese workers went home at a reasonable time instead of throwing their lives away working till stupid O'clock at night and then going for drinks with the boss it would solve everything. A more western attitude to work would do those people wonders.

You need job security to be able to get away with that, though and the long term trend for job security in Japan has been distinctly downwards for the past few decades, as I understand it. It's a really moribund economy and has been for a while :/
 
  • Feels
Reactions: Uncanny Valley
There are more non-Japanese in Japan today.


http://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/20...ts-hit-record-2-31-million-june/#.V-xEZ_ArIhd

The number of foreign residents in Japan hit a record 2.31 million at the end of June, up 3.4 percent from six months before, partly because of a rise in the number of trainees arriving to earn cash and skills, the Justice Ministry said.

Chinese, South Koreans, Filipinos and Brazilians remained the largest groups, numbering 677,571, 456,917, 237,103 and 176,284, respectively, officials said Monday.

Vietnamese nationals followed in fifth place at 175,744, up nearly 20 percent from the end of last year.

Of the 2.31 million, the number of those on mid- to long-term visas made up 85.1 percent of the total, including 713,604 permanent residents and 257,739 students. The number of job trainees increased 9.5 percent to 210,893, up from 192,665 at the end of last year.

The number of people on a visa that denotes an engineer or specialist in humanities and international services was up 11.8 percent at 154,021, while those on a spouse visa slipped 0.4 percent to 139,746.

Meanwhile, a new trend in tourism became clear: Many people are choosing to visit by ship.

The number of cruise ship passengers and others granted special entry permission in the January-June period shot up 173.3 percent from a year before to a record 830,000.

The number of foreign visitors, mainly tourists, jumped 22.4 percent from a year earlier to 11.46 million, a record high, the ministry said.

Officials attributed this to the dollar staying above ¥100, keeping prices reasonable, as well as a loosening of visa requirements.

During the six months, Japan saw 2.62 million visitors from mainland China, 2.51 million from South Korea, 2.09 million from Taiwan, 830,000 from Hong Kong and 620,000 from the United States, the preliminary figures showed.

Meanwhile, the number of non-Japanese known to be in the country illegally as of July 1 came to 63,492, up 674 from the start of the year, the ministry said. In all, 6,924 people were deported in the first half, up 1,161 from the period a year earlier.
 
Back