The Japan News by The Yomiuri Shimbun

Virus-linked job losses hurting Japanese-Brazilian community

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The employment situation has deteriorat­ed severely for many Japanese-Brazilians in this nation, due to the spread of the novel coronaviru­s. Thirty years have passed since the revised Immigratio­n Control and Refugee Recognitio­n Law came into force in 1990, allowing Japanese-Brazilians to settle here. However, many work as non-regular employees, and are treated like an “adjustment valve” for employment during economic crises. en and now, their position is precarious.

“We have no money for rent or food if we can’t find new jobs,” said a Japanese-Brazilian woman, 38, who lives in Iwata, Shizuoka Prefecture.

The woman came to Japan last November in search of a stable life. She worked as a temporary staffer at the same motorcycle parts factory as her husband, 45, who had come to Japan earlier. e couple’s monthly take-home pay was about ¥400,000, enough to live in an apartment in the city with their 16-year-old son.

However, the spread of the novel coronaviru­s has upended their lives. Since mid-April, factory jobs have decreased and their monthly income has been cut in half. eir contract, which ran through the end of May, was not renewed.

Employment insurance and special cash payments of ¥100,000 per person are not enough to live on. There are days when they have little to eat.

“We don’t know when the effects of the virus will subside. We’re the rst to be fired if something happens; it’s like we’re disposable,” the woman said.

The coronaviru­s crisis forced a 51-year-old Japanese-Brazilian man in Chiryu, Aichi Prefecture, to change jobs and lose income. He came to Japan in 1993 and worked as a temporary sta er at an electronic­s parts factory in Ibaraki Prefecture.

About 15 years ago, he moved to a car parts factory in Aichi Prefecture. His monthly income used to be about ¥300,000, but has since dropped to a third of that as he has worked at an agricultur­al cooperativ­e corporatio­n in Chiryu for the past month. “I’m not young enough to choose my job. I want a stable job and a stable life,” the man said.

Zenkoku Ippan Tokyo General Union, a labor union of foreign workers, has received about 4,000 labor consultati­ons from foreign nationals including Brazilians since February.

More than 95% of the union’s members are non-regular workers, and the most common complaints have been “I can’t get on-leave allowances” and “my employment contract was not renewed.”

A union official said, “If infections spread again, there could be even more cases of people being red or not having their contracts renewed.”

The spread of the coronaviru­s has also affected Japanese-Brazilian children. A Brazilian school named Escora Alegria de Saber in Hamamatsu, Shizuoka Prefecture, has about 170 children enrolled, ranging from babies to high school students. Six families in which the parents lost their jobs or were forced to reduce their work have asked the school to reduce their tuition.

Transferri­ng to a Japanese school is unnerving for the children because they don’t have enough knowledge of the Japanese language.

“At this rate, some students will have to leave school. If the number of students decreases, management of the school will become impossible,” a company o cial said.

 ?? The Yomiuri Shimbun ?? A Japanese-Brazilian man, left, meets with colleagues at an agricultur­al cooperativ­e corporatio­n in Chiryu, Aichi Prefecture.
The Yomiuri Shimbun A Japanese-Brazilian man, left, meets with colleagues at an agricultur­al cooperativ­e corporatio­n in Chiryu, Aichi Prefecture.

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