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.
 
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.

It would also be just yet another encouragement to the people who have entirely dropped out of the workforce and, for that matter, out of society in general, to continue to say fuck it and do just that.

Plus they'll probably treat the "guest" workers about as well as Saudi Arabia does.
 
It would also be just yet another encouragement to the people who have entirely dropped out of the workforce and, for that matter, out of society in general, to continue to say fuck it and do just that.

Plus they'll probably treat the "guest" workers about as well as Saudi Arabia does.
What's their alternative? These people just will not fuck.
 
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.
 
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.


Go ask Europe how bringing in millions of workers from different cultures and religion into your country how that has worked out for them. Their cultures are dying and now so are they. Be careful Japan.
 
Go ask Europe how bringing in millions of workers from different cultures and religion into your country how that has worked out for them. Their cultures are dying and now so are they. Be careful Japan.

To be fair, I believe they'll only be taking qualified labor from neighboring countries such as Vietnam, Korea, etc., so there's less of a culture shock there. That's not saying that newcomers won't be immediately rejected by mainstream Japanese society (because the Japanese has a hell of a problem with people from its neighboring countries, dating back centuries and most recently attributed to Japan's invasion and subsequent enslavement of the peoples of said countries during WWII) but it won't be anything like a mass invasion of kebab.
 
I'll be curious how this will work out.

In the medical sector, Japan had a programm that allows foreign people to work for instance in nursing homes, however the system was inherently flawed. In order to be eligible to work in that programm, you had to jump through several burning hoops, pray to the dark gods and sell your soul in exchange for a really short period of work without prospects of prolonging it. This made the program less than attractive to a lot of people and the whole thing kinda never went anywhere.
 
Last edited:
The sound you just heard is 1,500,000 weeaboos collectively coming in their waifus at the idea of leaving for japan




The other sound you heard are 3,000,000 parents crying with joy because they'll finally get their basements back

And another sound that will be heard in a few weeks is the whine and cry of said weeaboos about how hard it is, how low the pay, how expensive food costs, how small their living quarters are, how there isn't a lot of anime on TV, why various manga viewing sites are locked, and how difficult it is to communicate.
 
And another sound that will be heard in a few weeks is the whine and cry of said weeaboos about how hard it is, how low the pay, how expensive food costs, how small their living quarters are, how there isn't a lot of anime on TV, why various manga viewing sites are locked, and how difficult it is to communicate.
Wait, what do you mean "jail time for media piracy"?
 
To be fair, I believe they'll only be taking qualified labor from neighboring countries such as Vietnam, Korea, etc., so there's less of a culture shock there. That's not saying that newcomers won't be immediately rejected by mainstream Japanese society (because the Japanese has a hell of a problem with people from its neighboring countries, dating back centuries and most recently attributed to Japan's invasion and subsequent enslavement of the peoples of said countries during WWII) but it won't be anything like a mass invasion of kebab.

I'm sure lots of people will find the opportunity to travel over to Japan to be enslaved to be much more appealing than having Japan invade and enslave them.
 
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.
Currently, no, and it doesn't look like there's any plans to change that. There'd be a real shitstorm over in Japan if it happened.
 
I'm sure they'll be treated second class but I'm also pretty sure japan won't literally enslave and rape the workers like s.a.

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.
 
Back