2008年1月19日土曜日

Minor assignment5 First Draft

shimazaki

Current changes in the Japanese employment system

Ⅰ. Introduction
The Japanese employment system is strictly peculiar to Japan and difficult from employment systems in other countries. For Japanese people it is usual to work in one enterprise permanently and to increase their wage in proportion to their age. However such employment system is unusual for foreigners. The Japanese employment system was fixed in rapid economic growth period. Although the traditional Japanese employment system was rational in the rapid economic growth stage, there are many problems under the present Japanese social situation, therefore Japanese government and companies must adapt to changing condition. After examine current problems stemmed from Japanese employment system, this paper would try to provide possible solutions for these problems.

Ⅱ. Explain 3 main points of the Japanese employment system
There are three typical employment systems in Japan.
The permanent employment system has been one of the three core employment practices in Japan, along with seniority-based wage system and enterprise unions. In general, permanent employment means that a person who joins a company immediately after graduation from school will work for the company until worker mandatory retirement age, during which time the employee has almost no fear for dismissal. Therefore, most of Japanese workers carry on with their work by mandatory retirement age. For, enterprises, especially large Japanese enterprises, employ workers on the premise that permanent employment, since Japanese government controls companies by the law such as company can not fire employee without effort to avoid redundancies by taking measures such as cutting overtime, hiring freezes and so on. On-the-job training or firm-specific training is one of the constituents of Japanese permanent employment. Japanese companies emphasize the training and retraining of workers, and much of the training is specific to the company. Most of the companies prefer to hire new graduates and train them within their organization. In addition, in company there is job competition among workers. (Due to the growth of firm-specific skills, the tenure-earnings profile of the workers becomes steeper, which results in longer attachment between the workers and the company.)
Second unique system is related pay system. In general, the seniority-based wage system is a system in which an employee’s wages rise in proportion to the length of worker’s employment and age. (There are three sets of explanations for why wage increases with job tenure. The first is that workers are paid wages equal to their marginal product, and their wages rise because their productivity increase. The second explanation is given by the firm-specific human capital hypothesis. The third explanation is given by the incentive hypothesis. Companies give workers an incentive to work harder by delaying their compensations until later in the work cycle.) For, young workers can not be got wage fit their productivity.
Finally, it is enterprise-based unions. Japanese labor unions are based in the enterprise, although most of these
Actually, three systems connect tightly and these are called Japanese employment system.

Ⅲ. Current socio-economic situation in Japan and related problems
A. Problems existed from early times
1. Overwork
As mentioned in explanation of permanent employment system, companies can rarely fire employee and have to try to not fire their employees by some means. As one of means is cutting overtime, companies use overtime for one of tools to avoid redundancies. In other words, when company is quite good condition, company would increase worker’s overtime and when company is bad condition, company would decrease their overtime instead of dismissal. Although it seems that this overtime as means is satisfactory to employees, it is misunderstanding. Actually overtime problem is one of the serious problems in the Japanese labor market. The Labor Force Survey reported that the average Japanese in non-agricultural industries worked 46.1 hours per week in 1990 and 42.4 hours in 2001. Widespread working of overtime is partly due to the weakness of the labor union, but is also a direct consequence of the competitive tournaments that are used to determine promotions in Japan. Although overtime is necessary system to keep permanent employment, there is a situation that some people die due to work too much. Moreover, it is not good for children to not spend time with their parents. This overtime problem should be improved soon.

Difficult for non-new graduates to get a job
According to study of OECD, the length of employment for Japanese male workers is longer than in other developed countries. (OECD employment outlook) Japanese worker rare left their first employer because although it is a well-organized entry market for new graduates to obtain jobs, for non new-graduates it is quite difficult to obtain new job.

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B. Recent socio-economic situation
1. Increase of female workers
2. Declining birth rate and aging
C. Current problems stemmed from recent social situation
1. Discrimination against female worker
①Difficult to return a job after paternity leave
②Difficult to hold chief and manager
2. Wage problem stemmed from wage system based on seniority


Ⅳ. Possible solutions
1. Reduce irregular working hours(accept lay-off system)
2. Achieving a non-age-limit employment system
3. Provide opportunity for job training
4. Employ non-new graduates
5. company should estimate ability of each person
6. Improve day-care(female friendly)
7. Change working style(accept to work outside)
8. Convert traditional pay system into piece rate
9. worker don’t have to retire at 60
The delayed compensation model of Lazear (1979) rather explains why mandatory retirement is necessary. It argues that VMP (the value of marginal productivity) of a worker is greater than worker’s wage when the worker is young. As the worker stays in the company longer, worker’s wage grows faster, eventually exceeding worker’s VMP. Lazear notes that this delayed compensation contract with a steeper age-earnings profile gives workers an incentive to stay longer since they would not want to quit before the receiving the wage premium.

Ⅴ. Conclusion

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Works Cited
Naohiro Yashiro nihonnteki koyoukankou no keizaigaku, Japan: nihon keizai keizaisha, 1997.
Naohiro Yashiro koyou kaikaku no jidai, Japan: chuukoushinsho, 1999
Naohiro Yashiro, et al. Japan’s Economy in the Year 2020, Japan: nihon keizai shinbunsha, 1995.

Subocz, Victor. “Training the Japanese Way.” Management Decision 26.1(1988): 59. Academic Research Library. ProQuest. ICU. 31 Dec. 2007

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ESSAY Draft Checklist (Adapted from SGW, Version 1.1)


WRITER:HANAKO

PEER EDITOR:MIKI



Formatting/Appearance
Header top right? Yes
Student information top left? No
Title large size? No
Body text normal size? Yes No
Paragraphs indented? No
One space after all punctuation? Yes




Title and Student Information

1) Title reflects view point and content? Yes

2) Title correctly capitalized? No

3) Title one font size larger than student information? No

4) Student information correct and complete? No

5) Student information top left corner? No



Introduction

6) Do the first few sentences of the introduction capture your interest? Yes

7) Is the introduction well-developed & organized smoothly leading to the thesis? Yes

8) Does the introduction provide enough background information? Yes

9) Does the introduction avoid excessive detail? Yes

10) Is the thesis the final sentence of the introduction? Yes

11) Does the thesis clearly state the topic and controlling ideas(s)? Yes

12) Is the thesis clear and easy to understand? Yes

13) Does the thesis present an issue or idea that can be argued? Yes




Body Paragraphs

14) Does each paragraph have a clear topic sentence directly related to the thesis? Yes

15) Does each paragraph include at least one piece of evidence which has been thoroughly explained to support the topic sentence? No

16) Does each body paragraph directly relate to the thesis statement? Yes

17) Does each body paragraph have a concluding sentence? (If necessary) Yes No




Conclusion

18) Does the conclusion restate the thesis, summarize the main points, and then give suggestions/offer predictions/solutions? (If appropriate) Yes No

19) Does the conclusion leave you with the feeling that the paper is complete? Yes No




Unity/Coherence/Grammar

20) Have the ideas in the paper been organized well? Yes

21) Does the paper contain irrelevant information? No

22) Does the paper use transitions (within and between paragraphs)? Yes

23) Does the paper contain grammatical errors? No

24) Does the paper contain many spelling or typographical errors? No

25) Overall, does the paper make sense? Yes




Paraphrasing/Summarizing/Citations

26) Are sources effectively, appropriately, and adequately used? Yes

27) Has the writer integrated, not just dumped, their sources into the text? Yes No

28) Does the essay contain too many quotations (~10%)? No

29) Does the essay have citations within the paper? Yes No

30) Are the citations written correctly? Yes No

31) Are there any missing citations? Yes No

32) Is there a Works Cited? Yes

33) Are the sources on the Works Cited page written correctly? Yes

34) Are the sources listed (family name or title first) in alphabetical order? Yes