Bangkok Post

More companies embrace a four-day workweek

-

A growing list of Japanese companies have opened the door for employees to work four days a week, instead of five, offering them more flexibilit­y so they can improve their worklife balance to meet responsibi­lities at home or acquire new skills outside of their workplace.

While companies can benefit from introducin­g the compressed work schedule as it can help attract more talent or prevent employees from leaving, it remains to be seen whether the relatively new work style will gain traction in Japan.

Panasonic Holdings Corp became the latest company to embrace the four-day workweek, with the industrial conglomera­te saying last month that it would give some of its employees the option of taking a third day off during the current fiscal year through March.

Panasonic’s announceme­nt came after the Japanese government stated in its annual economic policy guideline last year that it encourages firms to offer an optional four-day workweek, as it can benefit workers for various purposes, such as child rearing, taking care of elderly family members and volunteeri­ng.

Panasonic, which will introduce the scheme on an experiment­al basis, joins other firms, including conglomera­te Hitachi Ltd, Mizuho Financial Group Inc and Fast Retailing Co, the operator of the Uniqlo clothing chain, to accept the four-day workweek.

“It is our responsibi­lity to ensure a work-life balance to our diverse workers,” Panasonic president Yuki Kusumi told a press conference in January.

Hiromi Murata, a senior researcher at Recruit Works Institute, said, “Companies see the four-day workweek as a way to hold onto skilled employees as it takes time to hire someone new and raise them to the same level.”

“There are many skilled workers, including mothers with small children, who cannot work five days a week. So firms can improve their chances of hiring someone with good qualificat­ions if they implement the four-day workweek,” she added.

As of last year, 8.5% of companies were giving employees more days off than under a five-day workweek, according to a survey conducted on over 4,000 companies by the Labour Ministry.

Among companies that have accepted the optional four-day workweek, pharmaceut­ical firm Shionogi & Co began allowing workers to take a third day off in April in the hope that they will acquire new skills or develop a network of contacts through additional education or working a second job.

As the Osaka-based drugmaker aims to expand its business to health care services using digital platforms, it saw the four-day workweek as an opportunit­y for employees to obtain knowhow in the digital field, the company’s public relations official said.

“We want workers to meet new people and experience things that they cannot at this company, and thus make use of them in their jobs here,” the official said.

Shionogi will give employees on a four-day workweek about 80% of their regular salary. But the firm allows workers to take a second job.

Meanwhile, Hitachi said in April it would allow employees to organise their work schedule flexibly, allowing them to take a four-day workweek, as long as they meet the necessary work hours per month.

In the new labour system to be introduced at a later time, Hitachi employees will receive the same level of salary even if they take a third day off.

Panasonic said last month it would decide on the specifics about the salary of workers on a four-day workweek before its launch.

“Companies that have so far accepted the system in Japan have done so in a way that won’t cause a burden on their finance,’’ said Takuya Hoshino, a senior economist at the Dai-ichi Life Research Institute. “The importance of meeting employees’ hopes to work flexibly has increased as Japan’s working population is expected to shrink in the future due to the country’s ageing population.’’

However, there are still doubts whether the new workstyle will gain popularity in Japan, where many companies only began offering two days off per week in the late 1980s.

A survey by job informatio­n provider Mynavi Corp released in February found that 78.5% of workers between in their 20s and 50s said they did not want to take three days off if their pay was cut.

Furthermor­e, 60.1% of the 800 respondent­s said it was impossible to introduce a four-day week at their workplace. Their reasons varied from being understaff­ed or the workload being too great.

It is our responsibi­lity to ensure a work-life balance to our diverse workers. YUKI KUSUMI President of Panasonic Holdings Corp

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand