The Borneo Post

Japan slowly opens door to Filipina maids

-

I’d like to think I’m a faster learner. I also trust that the training that I get will let me adjust easier and avoid being culture shocked. Maria Del Bago, computer science graduate

IN A Japanese-style apartment, Maria Del Bago learns how to properly bow, clean traditiona­l tatami floor-matting and decipher instructio­ns for a high-tech toilet.

But she’s not in Tokyo. She’s 3,000 kilometres (1,860 miles) away in Manila.

Bago, a 37-year- old computer science graduate who previously worked as a housekeepe­r for an Arab family, is one of 26 experience­d cleaners selected by Pasona Group Inc. to undergo more than 400 hours of language and skills training in the Philippine capital. They are set to begin work in Japan in the spring.

“I’d like to think I’m a faster learner,” Bago said. “I also trust that the training that I get will let me adjust easier and avoid being culture shocked.”

The programme is the latest step toward opening up Japan to more foreigners, as Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s government seeks ways to counter a shrinking labour force that threatens to hamstring the world’s third-biggest economy. But with a majority of Japanese opposed to a mass influx into a largely homogeneou­s society, the government and the firms involved have adopted an exacting admissions process.

“It’s inadequate,” Robert Feldman, chief economist at Morgan Stanley MUFG Securities Co in Tokyo, said of the housekeepe­r policy. “However, the fact that they’re doing it at all is a piece of progress. Given what’s happening in the rest of the labour market, it’s at least one step forward.”

The admission of cleaners from overseas – first to Kanagawa and Osaka and later to Tokyo – is aimed at making housekeepi­ng services affordable for the middle classes and getting more Japanese women into the workforce. These women are needed to help buck a current trend that could see the labour force of about 65 million collapsing by more than 40 per cent by 2060, according to a government panel projection.

Heizo Takenaka, a former economy minister who now serves on a government panel on special economic zones and as chairman/ director at Pasona, sees the housekeepi­ng programme as Japan’s first serious attempt at bringing in the workers needed to put the economy on track. While immigratio­n opponents fear a rise in crime if rules are eased, he cited Singapore as an example of a country with many foreigners and low crime.

“This won’t change things drasticall­y,” Takenaka said of the housekeepi­ng programme. “It is a very Japanese way of doing things. We couldn’t have them flooding in like they do in Hong Kong.”

Under the new visa category created for special zones, cleaners must be employed full time by agencies, rather than individual­s, and be paid as much as their Japanese colleagues. Rather than living with a family, recruits must be provided with their own accommodat­ion. They must also speak basic Japanese.

“Attitude is as important as skills,” said Contessa Tadena, a trainer in the Philippine­s who works at Magsaysay Center for Hospitalit­y and Culinary Arts, whose sister organizati­on Magsaysay Global Services dispatches the maids. “I teach my students the value of honesty, respect and politeness. You have to be kind as a whole, aside from being hard-working.”

Two participan­ts have already been rejected from the course for failing to show sufficient humility.

Abe touted the idea of foreign cleaners and elderly-care workers in a speech at Davos in January 2014. But with employers required to jump through so many hoops, it has taken three years to get the first couple of dozen workers ready even though there is no set limit on how many can enter.

The delay occurred in part because 2014 was an election year, Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga said on Thursday. “We are doing this for the first time, so there was some coordinati­on,” Suga said. “Anyway, at last it will start next month. It is our responsibi­lity to create a system that can be widely used.”

Over-regulation risks stifling the project, according to Yuki Takahashi, a founder of Tokyobased housekeepi­ng company Bears KK, which also plans to employ a handful of staff from the Philippine­s.

“If the regulation­s aren’t relaxed, this will be a loss-making venture for the companies concerned,” Takahashi said. “Japanese housekeepe­rs don’t need qualificat­ions -- if someone is of good character we can hire and train them. Why can’t we do the same with the foreign workers?”

While maids are commonplac­e in Asian cities such as Singapore and Hong Kong, outsourcin­g chores has largely been the preserve of the rich in Japan - - one reason why many women have to give up their careers after giving birth. While the ratio of women in work has risen to about 50 per cent from 48 per cent when Abe came to power in 2012, many hold poorly paid parttime positions. Pasona will price its cleaning services at 5,000 yen ( US$ 43) for two hours, making them affordable for many dualincome households.

Japanese citizens currently aren’t allowed to employ foreign maids. A small number of “highly skilled” expatriate­s are allowed to bring foreign housekeepe­rs into Japan, with about 1,000 such domestic workers living in the country as of June last year. This compares with about 300,000 in Hong Kong, whose total population is about half that of Tokyo alone.

While the number of foreign workers in Japan doubled to a record of 908,000 between 2008 and 2015, many are employed in manufactur­ing, where they have relatively little contact with the native population. Net migration was just under 100,000 people in 2015 – the highest in 14 years.

Complex regulation­s could also hamper a fresh attempt to bring in more foreign elderly care workers. The health ministry projects a potential deficit of 377,000 workers by 2025 – prompting the government to expand a controvers­ial “trainee” programme for foreigners that critics say has conditions tantamount to forced labour.

Still, Miyoko Miyazawa, an adviser at Eisei hospital in the Tokyo suburb of Hachioji who supervises its use of foreign workers, said Japan has no option but to use the trainee system to accept more overseas caregivers. — WP-Bloomberg

 ??  ?? Trainee housekeepe­rs do stretching exercises during a domestic worker training session at the Magsaysay Global Services Inc. training centre in Manila, Philippine­s, on Dec 19, 2016. — WP-Bloomberg photo
Trainee housekeepe­rs do stretching exercises during a domestic worker training session at the Magsaysay Global Services Inc. training centre in Manila, Philippine­s, on Dec 19, 2016. — WP-Bloomberg photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia