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WSWS : News
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: Japan
Economic hardship afflicts Japanese working class
By James Conachy
14 January 2002
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Unemployment in Japan is at its highest level for more than
50 years. In a country with a harsh welfare system, a pervasive
stigma against those who seek state assistance, and a media and
political establishment which generally ignores the plight of
the poor, millions of people are being left to suffer extreme
deprivation.
Among the most disturbing consequences have been the periodic
casesreported in a cold, matter-of-fact fashion by the pressof
jobless or financially distressed people starving to death in
their own homes.
In August, the media reported the case of two working class
brothers in Kashimadaimachi, a town in Miyagi prefecture. Both
in their 30s, they had been laid off from their jobs in a local
factory and post office and had large debts. They rarely left
their house. In late June, neighbours reported to police that
the house was unusually quiet and filed subsequent reports that
they had not seen the pair for several months and the letterbox
was overflowing. When the authorities finally investigated, the
brothers were found in their bedrooms, where they had starved
to death.
In June, two sisters in their late 30s were found dead from
starvation in their home in the town of Kitakyushu. They had lost
their only income when a tenant moved out of the house a year
earlier. Power and other utilities had been cut off, leading their
neighbours to believe the sisters had also moved. The pair, one
a former high school teacher who could not find work, wasted away
in their beds.
Such tragedies are an expression of a profound social crisis.
Official unemployment reached 5.4 percent in October, or 3.52
million people. The real figure would be three times that, if
it included the millions who have given up trying to find jobs
and those surviving on a few hours casual work. The official figures
count as employed anyone who works one hour in the surveyed week
of the month.
Throughout the 1990s, and particularly since the 1997-98 Asian
financial crisis, Japanese companies have been dispensing with
the system of lifetime employment set in place after World War
II. While mainly practised within the major corporations and the
public service, lifetime employment guaranteed many workers a
permanent job, medical insurance, assistance for housing or home
loans, a retirement fund and a range of other benefits. Faced
with ongoing recession in Japan and now the slump in the US and
Europe, companies, big and small, have sought to overcome falling
profits by cutting back staff or closing down operations altogether.
In the past six months alone, major companies have eliminated
more than 400,000 full-time jobs. From October 2000 to October
2001, the number of people with jobs fell to 64.05 million, a
drop of 1.03 million. The last time Japan experienced such a decline
was 1973-1974, when the country was plunged into short-term economic
turmoil by a massive increase in oil prices. The Labor ministry
now estimates that for every 100 people seeking work, just 55
positions are available. At the end of October, 49.3 percent of
the high school students who had graduated in June and actively
sought jobs were still unemployedthe worst level of graduate
unemployment ever recorded.
Workers are also facing employer demands for changed working
conditions, wage cuts and the reduction of bonuses and benefits.
Average incomes have fallen every month since last January and
part-time and temporary employment is growing rapidly. By 1998,
more than 21.5 percent of the workforce were part-time employees,
compared with 11 percent in 1985.
The reluctance of financially distressed people to seek help
stems in large part from the harsh eligibility standards for unemployment
benefits and public assistanceas welfare to the poor is
known. Even for a 59-year-old worker who has paid into unemployment
insurance for over 20 years, benefits are only available for 330
days. For an unemployed worker under 30, who had paid insurance
for between one and 10 years, unemployment benefits are cut off
after just 90 days.
Public assistance is strictly means-tested according to a minimum
cost of living. Moreover, anyone classified as capable of
working or deemed to have relatives who could support them is
ineligible. Applicants must have used up their assets, including
selling their house. A June 2000 study for the Women 2000
Conference reported that less than one third of those in
need applied for social welfare benefitswhether public assistance,
single mother pensions or assistance for the elderly.
Growing homelessness
The most visible impact of the lack of social support is the
growing homeless population. Up to 10,000 people, mainly unemployed
men aged 50 to 64, sleep rough in Tokyo. Osakas homeless
may number as high as 15,000, with a survey finding that 80 percent
were former construction day-labourers, dispensed with by contracting
companies when they could no longer carry out hard physical work.
The countrys staggering suicide rate testifies to other
consequences of financial stress. Of the 31,957 people who took
their lives in 2000, more than 60 percent were aged over 50. The
recorded motive for more than half, 15,539, was related to health
problems, in many cases bound up with difficulty in paying medical
bills.
In June 2000, more than 3.7 million households were not able
to pay their health insurance obligations and 96,849 households
had been issued qualification certificates, effectively
cutting them off and making them liable for the entire cost of
any medical expenses. Last month, aggravating the pressure on
the working population, the government unveiled a budget that
increased the amount a family pays under the national health insurance
scheme from 20 percent to 30 percent of the cost of treatment.
The amount that an average income retiree must pay will more than
double from 5,000 yen (about $US40) to 12,000 yen (about $100)
a month.
Aged care expenses are prohibitive, even for relatively comfortable
families. A place in a private nursing home can cost between $US250,000
and $1,000,000, with ongoing fees of $15,000 to $25,000. Many
families have no choice but to care for their aged parents at
home. When the elderly lose contact with their relatives the consequences
can be horrific. Last October, a 71-year-old invalid woman starved
to death in her bed over a six-day period after her husband died
of a heart attack in front of her. Unable to afford a nursing
home, the 73-year-old husband had been her sole carer. The couple
were only found when their landlord came to collect their months
rent.
Other financial problems, such as inability to meet mortgage
payments, were the motive in 6,838 suicides. Despite low interest
rates, the collapse of real estate values in the past decade means
that many Japanese workers are paying back mortgages, taken out
in the 1980s, that are worth more than the property.
Education costs are also causing difficulties. According to
teacher unions, the number of families that cannot pay their school
fees has doubled in the past five years. One union survey found
that an average of 13 families per school had not paid fees for
several months. Many of those facing hardships are families where
the father has left. The average annual income of fatherless households
is just 2.16 million yen ($16,500), compared with 6.58 million
yen for a two-parent household. Costs are continuing to rise,
however. The government last month increased the annual tuition
at general universities by 7.2 percent, to over 500,000 yen.
Every economic indicator points to the fact that the conditions
facing working people are set to dramatically worsen. The country
is officially in its third recession in 10 years. Industrial factory
output has fallen back to the levels of 1988 and exports are slumping.
In October, 1,804 businesses employing 19,550 workers went bankruptthe
32nd month in a row in which more than 10,000 people lost their
jobs due to bankruptcy. A recent government study found that 72
percent of people fear that they or a family member will lose
their job in the next 12 months. Consumer spendingwhich
drives 60 percent of economic activityis contracting as
anxiety builds about the future. Car sales have hit a 25-month
low and bank lending has fallen for 46 straight months.
Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumis government is introducing
austerity measures in an attempt to control Japans spiralling
public debt and the major banks are under pressure to bankrupt
companies not making loan repayments. Combined, these measures
could cause as many as four million layoffs.
See Also:
Japan moves into recession
as credit rating cut again
[10 December 2001]
Massacre of Japanese
school-children provokes questioning of society
[3 August 2001]
Violent juvenile crimes
in Japan point to a deeper social crisis
[18 October 2000]
A child murder in Japan
points to a growing social alienation
[19 June 2000]
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