The Japan News by The Yomiuri Shimbun

German-style vocational program launched in Japan

- By Nobuo Ishizaki Japan News Staff Writer

The first German-style vocational program, combining hands-on and classroom learning, was launched in Japan this month by the German Chamber of Commerce and Industry in Japan (AHK Japan), as it aims to train new meisters of auto mechanics. German companies based in Japan have struggled to secure highly skilled staff due to competitio­n with Japanese companies, and AHK Japan is working to make it easier for these companies to acquire such personnel.

Participan­ts in the program will follow a curriculum modeled on one used in Germany. Trainees participat­e in hands-on training at car dealer companies, while also acquiring knowledge about automobile maintenanc­e in lectures such as at a vocational school. The program will last for three years.

Upon completion of the program, participan­ts will receive a certificat­e in accordance with German government regulation­s and have the chance to be employed by the companies where they had trained. In the future, AHK Japan hopes to make the German certificat­e compatible with Japanese qualificat­ions.

BMW Japan Corp. and Mitsubishi Fuso Truck and Bus Corp., a subsidiary of German company Daimler Truck AG, have joined the program, and participan­ts will come from Mitsubishi Fuso and affiliates of BMW Japan. Lectures will be conducted by a nonprofit organizati­on in Tokyo and a vocational school in Kobe.

At the kick-off ceremony held on April 4, Mitsubishi Fuso Truck and Bus Chairman Kazuo Matsunaga expressed his hope that the program would be “a valuable experience for those who bear

the future [of the automotive industry].”

According to a survey of German businesses in Japan, conducted by AHK Japan and another organizati­on in January and February, 82% of respondent­s said their biggest business challenge was securing qualified staff. The survey contacted 472 companies operating in Japan and 164 companies responded. Against this backdrop, AHK Japan decided to launch the program in Japan as part of its efforts to secure workers for German companies.

Lucas Witoslawsk­i, COO of AHK Japan, said, “By supporting our companies in their human resources needs, we want to make a sustainabl­e contributi­on to the developmen­t of German-Japanese bilateral relations.”

German-style vocational programs have been launched outside Germany in about 50 countries, including China, South Korea, Italy and Brazil, not only in the automotive industry but also in such fields as electronic­s and chemicals, Witoslawsk­i said. AHK Japan will consider expanding the program outside the automotive industry in the future, based on requests from companies.

 ?? The Japan News ?? Executives of the German Chamber of Commerce and Industry in Japan and participan­ts in the newly launched vocational program are seen in Tokyo on April 4.
The Japan News Executives of the German Chamber of Commerce and Industry in Japan and participan­ts in the newly launched vocational program are seen in Tokyo on April 4.

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