Arbeitslosenselbsthilfe O l d e n b u r g

Kaiserstr. 19

D-26122 Oldenburg (Oldenburg)

e-mail: also@also-zentrum.de

 

 


Antwort in : /alt/activism/d
Absender   : rich@pencil.math.missouri.edu  (Rich Winkel)
Betreff    : JAPAN: Amid Recession, The New Poor Demand Safety Nets
Datum      : Di 15.09.98, 22:21  (erhalten: 16.09.98)
Groesse    : 8287 Bytes
----------------------------------------------------------------------
/** ips.english: 494.0 **/
** Topic: JAPAN: Amid Recession, The New Poor Demand Safety Nets **
** Written  4:07 PM  Sep 14, 1998 by newsdesk in cdp:ips.english **
       Copyright 1998 InterPress Service, all rights reserved.
          Worldwide distribution via the APC networks.
                      *** 11-Sep-98 ***
Title: JAPAN:
Amid Recession, The New Poor Demand Safety Nets
By Suvendrini Kakuchi
TOKYO, Sep 11 (IPS) - Raita Taguchi, an economics graduate from
prestigious Keio University, thought he had embarked on a stable
career when he joined Kankaku, a leading securities company, 10
years ago.
But he lost his job three years after starting work as the firm
reeled from the drastic fall of the Nikkei, Japan's stock market,
from a high of 38,000 in 1987 to less than 20,000 five years
later.
''I was asked to politely leave in 1991 as part of the company's
restructuring programme to meet revenue losses,'' he recalled.
Still, Taguchi was luckier than others and landed a job at the
computer section of Ebara Corp, which deals with machinery and
plant equipment.
Almost eight years later, Japan's grim economic picture has
upset Taguchi's life once more. As Asian economies collapsed
around Japan, Ebara, which has manufacturing firms in six of them,
got the jitters. Taguchi lost his job in January.
But this time, Taguchi is not content to just sit by. In April
he joined Network Union, a trade union formed to help Japan's
increasing number of unemployed young people, and is suing Ebara
for unfair dismissal.
''People must be treated differently from commodities. Hard
workers must not be forced to take the brunt of a recession that
is caused by bad management and unfair policies that were enforced
as a result of greed,'' Taguchi explained.
He argues that the company could have cut back on other sectors
first before resorting to lay-offs. Taguchi considers himself a
victim of Japan's high-growth policies, which often included
bureaucrat-led excessive production and consumption, and bred
corruption.
Today, people like him feel Japan is in an economic rut, the
subject of desperate efforts at revival but locked in recession
and headed, many say, for a deflationary cycle.
Amid recession, distressed companies need more credit but banks
are unable to respond because their client firms are in turn
unable to repay loans. Firms are hard pressed too because demand
is falling and people are holding on to their savings, forcing
companies to cut back on investments and fire staff.
These form a destructive cycle that weakens Japan's economy
further, and is starting to a toll on a population that for a long
time did not have to worry about hard times.
Taguchi, part of the growing ranks of the unemployed, is quite
a new social phenomenon in the world's second richest country.
In May, the Management and Coordination Agency reported that
unemployment stood at 4.2 percent, or 2.93 million in a country of
126 million people. That is Japan's highest jobless level since
the Pacific War.
The worst hit are workers between 45 and 54 years of age, but
the report cites a new phenomenon in the rise of unemployment
among younger workers. The media estimates this number to be
almost 8.4 percent, up from 7.1 percent last year.
Last week, Hitachi, one of Japan's largest manufacturers of
electric machinery and semiconductors, said it expects a group
loss of 1.8 billion U.S. dollars for the fiscal year ending March
1999, its first loss ever.
''This is the largest crisis since Hitachi was established in
1920,'' President Tsutomu Kanai said. The company plans to lay off
4,000 workers, bringing to 66,000 the number of staff it has
fired.
Likewise, Japan has just seen the biggest collapse of a
manufacturer since the Pacific War -- in the fall of Toa Steel Co
which said it would liquidate at the end of this fiscal year.
''Japan's slump is extremely severe,'' said Taichi Sakaiya, the
new head of the Economic Planning Agency. He predicted growth for
1998 at between 0.5 percent and minus 0.5 percent.
Japan is in the throes of an eight-year recession. Production
fell by 5.3 percent last year and personal and corporate
bankruptcies are rising. In June alone, reports the private Tokyo
Shoko Research company, the number of corporate collapses was
1,736, a 36 percent rise from May.
Domestic demand remains stagnant despite government attempts to
stimulate spending. Household spending in July was around 2,448.59
dollars, down by 3.4 percent, marking the ninth straight year-on-
year decline.
Small and medium firms that comprise majority of bankruptcies
are folding up since banks do not enough resources to lend.
Interest rates were cut further on Wednesday, but some analysts
fear the economy is in such bad shape it is not responding as
expected by picking up consumption.
With more trouble coming, more people in this affluent society
are realising the need for social safety nets and are calling for
a review of the same growth policies largely responsible for
Japan's progress since the Pacific War.
''What we need is a new concept,'' said Yasuhiko Shibata, a
senior fellow at the Yomuiri Research Institute. ''It's important
to establish a system that would enable us to survive in the next
century and develop mechanisms to prevent further environmental
destruction and to use our limited resources efficiently.''
Faced with the social costs of this economic depression, the
government of Prime Minister Keizo Obuchi is having to struggle
with new proposals that no longer focus solely on growth.
While the government has promised to revitalise the economy by
the year 2000 by enacting reform that would hasten deregulation,
it is also introducing measures to ease the burden on the public.
Japan's system is sometimes called ''Japanese socialism'',
because it seeks to give economic security to everyone, for
instance through the system of seniority in wage systems.
But this is likely to change as Japan moves undertakes more
privatisation and deregulation under the label of ''economic
reforms''. In fact, Japanese media have been airing public concern
about the risks of failure due to cut-throat competition.
The government has proposed an income tax as a way of dealing
with growing economic burdens, but critics find this a stopgap
measure at best.
Recent media surveys show that people want improved social
infrastructure, criticising Tokyo's emphasis on public works when
they say the need is for housing, education and welfare.
''The government's role is to ensure social fairness for the
sake of social stability. It is imperative to ensure that in a
period of low economic growth, no one falls through the cracks,''
the 'Asahi Shimbun' daily argued recently, reflecting how high
social concerns have climbed amid recession. (END/IPS/ap-if-
Origin: Manila/JAPAN/
                              ----
       [c] 1998, InterPress Third World News Agency (IPS)
                     All rights reserved
  May not be reproduced, reprinted or posted to any system or
  service outside  of  the  APC  networks,  without  specific
  permission from IPS.  This limitation includes distribution
  via  Usenet News,  bulletin board  systems, mailing  lists,
  print media  and broadcast.   For information about  cross-
  posting,   send   a   message  to   <wdesk@ips.org>.    For
  information  about  print or  broadcast reproduction please
  contact the IPS coordinator at <online@ips.org>.
** End of text from cdp:ips.english **
***************************************************************************
This material came from the Institute for Global Communications (IGC), a
non-profit, unionized, politically progressive Internet services provider.
For more information, send a message to igc-info@igc.org  (you will get
back an automatic reply), or visit their web site at http://www.igc.org/  .
IGC is a project of the Tides Center, a 501(c)(3) charitable organization.
***************************************************************************

Index of Welfare-Workfare-State Archives


ALSO-Homepage


Last Modified: October 1998