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Japan’s labour crunch is reshaping companies

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Misaki Harada wants to quit her job as a receptionist at a restaurant management company in Tokyo and move into marketing for an apparel maker.


But the 24-year-old said she wanted more than just a bigger paycheck. Her next employer would need to improve her quality of life.


“If you ask me whether I prefer more money or more flexible working hours, I would choose more flexible working hours,” she said. “I want to get married soon and start a family. I want to make sure I have time to take care of my children.”


As Japan’s population dwindles, its companies are being forced to change how they attract job seekers like Harada from an ever-shrinking labour pool.


Nationwide, there are 1.62 jobs available for every job seeker, the strongest demand for labour in more than 44 years. The jobless rate is 2.4 per cent, near a 25-year low, and real wages adjusted for inflation have fallen in five of the past six years.


Flexible working hours, personal benefits like day care and even rent assistance are now on the table alongside salary. Such perks, common in the United States and Europe, are only just catching on in Japan, which until recently relied on a culture of complete devotion to an employer in exchange for job security and steady pay increases.


Toyota, for instance, opened a 24-hour day care facility in April for shift workers at its plants near its headquarters in Toyota City. “Japanese companies are becoming more flexible about when and where you work,” said Toshiaki Matsumoto, chief executive of HR Strategy, a human resources consultancy.


Some companies, like Jtekt Corp, the world’s biggest supplier of vehicle steering systems, are simply moving some of their operations away from competition.


Jtekt last year cut the ribbon on a new technology development centre in Akita Prefecture, northern Japan, known more for its rice, sake and namesake dog breed than engineering. The facility, which will develop technology for self-driving cars, is far from other companies hiring into the industry.


So far the company, a key supplier of Toyota Motor Corp, has hired about 20 engineers and plans to roughly double its workforce by the end of the year.


“In larger cities, it’s difficult to get across the message that we are hiring because we’re competing with many companies for the same talent,” said Fukami Imai, the centre’s representative director.


Denso Corp, another Toyota supplier, took the opposite route, moving part of its self-driving research programme to Tokyo because it is a more attractive locale than its headquarters in gritty Nagoya.


“Some companies are offering free food or subsidising rent so workers can shorten commuting time,” Matsumoto said. “Some companies even provide counselling and time off for couples trying to conceive.”


Japan’s working-age population peaked in 1995 at 87 million and is forecast to fall to 45 million by 2065. Businesses slow to respond to that demographic change have been hit hard.


Silicon Technology, a semiconductor material maker, is running one rural plant at half-capacity because it can’t hire enough workers. Toyobo Co Ltd said it needs to ramp up production of film used in flat-panel displays, but can’t fully staff the production line. — Reuters


Stanley White & Naomi Tajitsu


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