Baltimore Sun

Japan: ‘We need more workers’

Plan to import labor roils an immigratio­naverse, aging nation

- By Simon Denyer

YOKOHAMA, Japan — As the United States and Europe take steps to keep more people out, Japan is cautiously moving to let more people in.

This is a country that has long sought to defend its culture and its ethnic homogeneit­y by discouragi­ng immigrants. Now, with its population continuing to shrink and age, and its labor force dwindling, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe is thinking the previously unthinkabl­e.

This month, his government introduced a bill that aims to bring in hundreds of thousands of “semiskille­d” foreign workers in the years ahead, opening Japan’s doors like never before.

He is careful to stress that this is not “immigratio­n,” because these workers are not supposed to stay indefinite­ly, but it is still a shift being described as a watershed moment in the country’s modern history. Critics say the plan is ill-thoughtout — an immigratio­n policy by stealth that will cause problems down the line.

“This is the biggest turning point in postwar Japan,” Akira Nagatsuma of the opposition center-left Constituti­onal Democratic Party of Japan told parliament, calling the government’s proposal “irresponsi­ble” and “half-baked.”

“I am not saying no to foreign workers,” he said. But he added that there needs to be rigorous planning and a meaningful debate on how to integrate foreigners into Japanese society.

What is not up for debate is the urgency of the situation.

Birthrates are falling across the developed world, and population­s are aging, Members of the far-right Japan First party stage a protest against immigratio­n while activists accuse them of racism. but nowhere is this hitting harder than in Japan.

Its population is expected to drop from about 127 million to just 88 million by 2065. People over 65 already account for 28 percent of the population, and 500 schools close every year because of a lack of students.

Letting in more people may be the only way to reverse the slide to stagnation and decline, experts say. The problem is what happens then.

“If depopulati­on continues, people will come to Japan somehow,” said Toshihiro Menju, managing director of the Japan Center for Internatio­nal Exchange. “We need an immigratio­n policy to prevent an immigratio­n problem.”

Abe’s government is conservati­ve, but it is also closely entwined with the business community, and the message it hears from every quarter — shipbuild- ing and constructi­on, agricultur­e and fishing, eldercare establishm­ents and convenienc­e-store owners — is ever more insistent: We need more workers.

While the highly skilled have always been welcome, Abe wants to allow in 345,000 semiskille­d workers by 2024, letting them come for a maximum of five years in about a dozen industries, including agricultur­e and constructi­on.

If they pass some stillunspe­cified tests at the end of that period, they could be allowed to stay for five more years, and even bring relatives.

Previous efforts to ease Japan’s labor shortage have had mixed results.

Abe initially tried to attract more women and seniors back into the workforce, and also sought to boost fertility rates, but those efforts could not overcome overwhelmi­ng demographi­c trends.

In the late 1980s, Japan opened its doors to the descendant­s of ethnic Japanese who had emigrated at the beginning of the century, and hundreds of thousands came from Latin America, especially Brazil and Peru.

But even though they looked Japanese, many barely spoke the language and many failed to integrate. In 2009, after the global financial crisis, Japan started offering them money to return home.

Workers of different ethnicitie­s also came — but under much more restrictiv­e policies.

The main vehicle was the Technical Intern Training Program, or TITP, introduced in 1993, under which workers from other Asian countries were supposed to be given training for three to five years before returning home.

“It is a sham, pretty much just a way of importing cheap labor from overseas,” said lawyer Yoshihito Kawakami, adding that workers often don’t receive any real training.

About 270,000 foreigners, many from Vietnam, China, the Philippine­s and Myanmar, work in Japan under the TITP program. Yet, because of the abuses inherent in the system, about 4,300 absconded from the program in the last six months alone, with many going undergroun­d as undocument­ed workers.

If Abe’s bill passes, some foreign workers will bring relatives and some may stay long enough to gain permanent residency, as many of the arrivals from Brazil and Peru have done.

It could represent a sea change for a country where few people speak foreign languages or have much contact with foreigners.

Japan is home to 2.6 million foreigners, about 2 percent of the population, but based on current trends, that number could rise to 12 percent in 50 years, said Makoto Kato, who analyzes the economics of immigratio­n.

That is approximat­ely the ratio in Germany.

The problem is that Japan’s unwillingn­ess to admit that it is accepting immigrants means no government funds are allocated for integratio­n efforts, and there is no law against hate speech or discrimina­tion against foreigners, Kato and other experts say.

Masashi Ichikawa of the Japan Bar Associatio­n likens Japan to Germany in the 1970s, when it brought in “guest workers” from Turkey.

“The idea was that they would not stay in the country permanentl­y, and so it wasn’t necessary for the government to implement social integratio­n policies,” he said. “But in reality, they stayed. And now they are having to pay the price for that. I worry Japan will face similar problems.”

A lack of inclusion could be a recipe for social unrest, while an economic downturn could leave Japan regretting how many people it allowed in, some experts warn.

Goshi Hosono, an independen­t member of parliament, says the latest move, if handled strictly but humanely, could prove a positive one for Japan.

Others see things differentl­y.

The far-right Japan First party held rallies across Japan in October protesting Abe’s plan, although the demonstrat­ors were often outnumbere­d by activists accusing them of racism and hate speech.

“We should protect our own culture,” said Kazuhiro Nakamura, the head of Japan First’s office in Kanagawa. “People from different cultures tend to claim their own rights. Just as it has in Europe, that could lead to conflict.”

 ?? SIMON DENYER/WASHINGTON POST ??
SIMON DENYER/WASHINGTON POST

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