Overworkig in Japan

 
 
 

Vocabulary

 

impact mean (3) consumer
fix quarter so much so
salary employee long/longer/longest
define overtime pay/paid/paid
expect assume productivity
loyalty standard drive/drove/driven (2)
entitle colleague spend/spent/spent (2)
survey firm (2) drink/drank/drunk
off (2) term (2) wear/wore/worn
per briefcase hold/held/held
top (2) confine work ethic
miracle mention begin/began/begun
impact success emphasize
ethic title (2) previously
guilty concern find/found/found (2)
propel corporate feel/felt/felt (2)
legal deal (2) low/lower/lowest
suicide stroke (2) heart attack
exceed case (3) recognize (2)
report massive depression (2)
illegal generate widespread
renew argue (2) attention
fine (2) common advertising
labor force (3) participate
CEO turn on controversy
resign turn off individual
reduce sign (2) hospitality
hope initiative mandatory
curb require balance (2)
annual period (3) bring/brought/brought
launch promote remains to be seen
loom way of life project (2)
violate maintain leave/left/left (2)
put in active (2) work-life balance
decline birth rate see/saw/seen
crisis initiative shrink/shrank/shrunk
rate shortage compensate
expect robotics compared to
accept consider fill in the gap
gap vacation manufacture
span premium good/better/best
explain good/better/best

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Video

 

 
 
 
 

Transcript

Working long hours is a way of life in Japan. So much so, that some occasionally die from it. Karoshi is a term that means death by overwork.

So why are people working so hard? And can it be fixed?

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Japan has some of the longest working hours in the world. Nearly a quarter of Japanese companies have their employees work more than 80 hours of overtime per month. Those extra hours are often unpaid.

Today, Japan’s corporate culture is driven by the so-called salaryman.
The salaryman is defined by his loyalty to his company and expected to spend his entire career working for the same firm.

Not only does he work long hours in the office, but it’s also assumed
he’ll participate in after-work activities too, like drinking with colleagues.

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And they’re not taking enough time off. In 2017, one survey found that despite being entitled to 20 days off per year, Japanese workers left 10 of those days unused — topping every other country in the survey.

You don’t have to be in the confines of corporate walls to feel the impact of its work culture.

It’s 3am Thursday morning right now in Tokyo, I’m in the area of Ginza.
Every few minutes I see a man wearing a suit, holding a briefcase.

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The nation’s work ethic dates back to what’s referred to as Japan’s economic miracle, which was its dramatic economic growth beginning in the 1950s,
which propelled it to become the world’s second-largest economy.

Inside Japan’s corporations, the culture emphasizes the success of
a company as a whole to be more important than any single individual,
which might explain why one study found that 63% of Japanese felt guilty for taking paid leave.

But perhaps more concerning is this: Long work hours don’t necessarily mean high productivity. In fact, Japan has the lowest productivity amongst the G7 nations.

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Earlier I mentioned the term karoshi – it means death by overwork.
It’s legally recognized by the government and usually is marked by a heart attack, stroke or suicide due to stress.

There’s hundreds of cases of karoshi reported annually, although some argue these cases are underreported and that the real number could exceed that by up to 10 times.

An employee of the advertising firm Dentsu jumped to her death in 2015.
The cause was said to have been depression caused by overwork.

The case generated widespread attention and renewed calls to change the long working hours and illegal unpaid overtime highly common in Japan.
The firm was fined for violating labor standards because she was reportedly forced to work more than 100 hours of overtime per month.

The company’s CEO even resigned over the controversy.

After the death, Dentsu made some changes within the company.

One of them?

The lights in the office now turn off at 10pm every night in an effort to force employees to leave.

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Both the government and companies are now actively trying to reduce the number of working hours here. And there are some early signs of hope.

Japan’s government has considered several initiatives to curb the number of hours spent at the office, including making it mandatory to take at least five vacation days a year and requiring a “rest” period between the end of one day and the start of another.

In 2016, a new holiday “Mountain Day” was started, bringing Japan’s number of annual public holidays to 16. And in 2017, the government launched an initiative called Premium Fridays, in which it encouraged companies to allow their employees to leave at 3pm on the last Friday of the month, promoting consumer spending and less time in the office.

But one study found that less than 4% of employees in Japan actually left early on the first Premium Friday. Which is why despite these initiatives, a cultural challenge still looms.

Since Japan’s culture emphasizes the group over the individual, well,
no one wants to be the first one to leave the office.

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And there’s another reason that there’s pressure on people to work hard.
Japan’s economy is in danger. And in order to maintain its massive size, Japan needs to put in the hours.

Japan lost its spot as the world’s second-largest economy to China in 2011,
a title that it had previously held for 42 years.

Japan is dealing with a labor crisis. Its population is aging fast and its birth rate is in decline. That means its total population is going down. And in the next 50 years, it’s projected to shrink by nearly a third. The population is expected to go from 127 million in 2015, to just 88 million by 2065.

There’s two likely ways the nation can compensate for the labor shortage – immigrants or robots.

Japan has always been less inclined to accept immigrants. In fact, its percentage of foreign workers is tiny compared to other nations of large economies.

So without more immigrants, it’s looking to robotics to fill in the gap. Its robotics industry has spanned from hospitality to manufacturing, and now even reaching farms by creating robots that milk cows.

But whether technology could open the door for a better work-life balance for Japan’s workforce still remains to be seen.

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Questions

Worker, Employee. People can only die from accidents, illnesses and diseases. True or false?

Boss, Supervisor. Do most Japanese work part-time? Do they mostly work from Monday to Friday, from ten o’clock in the morning to three o’clock in the afternoon?

Manager. After work, most Japanese employees go home and watch TV or surf the internet?

Accountant, Financial Manager. All Japanese people love to take vacations. All Japanese like going on vacations. Is this right or wrong?

Executive, CEO. Are the Japanese ambitious? Do they care mostly about themselves? Do they respect and remain loyal to single company? Is this an ancient tradition going back centuries?

Board of Directors. Japanese workers are very productive; at the office, they work very hard and efficiently. Is this correct or incorrect?

Shareholders. Is the government encouraging people to work longer hours?

Small Business. Describe the demographic trend of Japan. What are the two main solutions?
 
 
 
Company. What is the average workweek in your country? When do people usually start and end work?

Corporation. Do people complain about overworking, underemployment or unemployment?

Multinational Corporation. Describe the ideal work schedule for people. Is this realistic in the modern economy?

Clerk, Secretary. What might happen in the future?

Office Manager. What could or should people, governments and businesses do?
 
 
 
 
 
 

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