The Columbus Dispatch

Japan’s plan for foreign workers scrutinize­d

- By Isabel Reynolds and Emi Urabe

A strict immigratio­n policy has helped make Japan one of the world’s oldest and most homogeneou­s societies.

Now, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s plan to invite as many as a half- million foreign workers is testing the country’s tolerance for change.

Abe is preparing to introduce legislatio­n to allow migrants to start filling vacancies next year in sectors worst hit by the country’s shrinking population. While the government hasn’t released a target, local media have reported numbers that would represent a 40 percent increase over the 1.3 million foreign workers now living in the country.

In a sign of urgency, Abe’s government has announced an April start date for the policy before debate has begun in parliament. The proposal is among the first he’s seeking to tackle after winning a historic third term as head of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party last month, paving the way for him to become the country’s longest- ever serving prime minister.

If passed, the legislatio­n would amount to Japan’s most dramatic immigratio­n overhaul since the 1990s, when it let “trainees” from Asian nations in the country. Foreigners made up only about 1.7 percent of the country’s population as of April, compared with 3.4 percent in South Korea and about 12 percent in Germany.

Abe got a reminder of the risks Sunday as more than 100 noisy protesters marched through Tokyo’s Ginza shopping district, waving imperial army flags and urging the plan’s withdrawal. Although the group. called Japan First, was outnumbere­d by police and pursued by counterpro­testers chanting “racists go home,” they appeared keen to tap into anti- immigrant sentiments that have bubbled up elsewhere in the developed world.

“Far- right parties have very little support in Japan,” said Eriko Suzuki, a professor who researches migration at Kokushikan University. “But there are a lot more people, a kind of reserve army, who are vaguely concerned about admitting foreigners. If the government doesn’t put together appropriat­e policies, that unease will increase.”

The risks of inaction could be just as great, as Japan’s declining population takes its toll on the economy. In a survey published by the Japan Chamber of Commerce and Industry in June, two- thirds of companies said they were short of workers.

The number of companies folding because of a lack of workers jumped by 40 percent in the first half of the financial year, compared with the same period in 2017, according to Teikoku Databank Ltd.

Abe’s plan, set to be introduced in the parliament­ary session beginning later this month, calls for creating two classes of foreign workers to serve in about 10 as- yet- unspecifie­d industries. Lower- skilled migrants would be allowed to stay for as long as five years and barred from bringing their families. More highly skilled workers could bring family members and stay longer — potentiall­y gaining permanent residence.

Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga said Friday that the total number of new workers hasn’t been determined. The industries entitled to recruit overseas workers will include elderly care, constructi­on, shipbuildi­ng, agricultur­e and the hotel trade, according to domestic news reports.

“It’s a sea change in Japan’s immigratio­n policy,” said Ippei Torii of Solidarity Network with Migrants Japan, who has for decades worked to support foreign workers experienci­ng problems. “Japan is finally getting around to thinking about how to deal with this.”

Mikio Okamura, the head of the Tokyo chapter of Japan First, called for the government to spend money on improving pay and conditions for Japanese citizens, rather than relying on foreigners.

“Before you let in foreigners, you should deal with Japan’s unemployed. We want them to use tax money to do that,” Okamura said. “Then, we would have Japanese people looking after the elderly. That would be the happiest result for the Japanese and for the foreigners, as well.”

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