Japan Today
business

Japan's efforts to raise wages wane as firms embrace merit-based pay

24 Comments
By Tetsushi Kajimoto and Izumi Nakagawa

The requested article has expired, and is no longer available. Any related articles, and user comments are shown below.

© Thomson Reuters 2020.

©2024 GPlusMedia Inc.

24 Comments
Login to comment

Lads! No worries,

I'm more than sure Abe got this.

0 ( +0 / -0 )

The radical change needs to begin with Western governments making market access conditional upon Japanese firms extending to their workers in Japan the same rights and conditions which workers in their overseas subsidiaries take for granted. Failure to make this a condition of doing business will result in ceding more and more ground as a direct result of the unfair cost advantage conferred by practices such as service zangyo, obligatory sacrifice of half of annual leave, and the many other not so hidden Dickensian features. If they can afford to follow the law abroad, they should be able to afford the same conditions here.

0 ( +0 / -0 )

For 70+ years the hard-working citizens of Japan have devoted their lives to companies in an effort to rebuild the nation. After all this time, who has benefited? The companies and the politicians. Despite record profits, much of which is invested overseas, salaries remain stagnant, and the living standard has been declining for the last 40 years.

What a truly sad state of affairs. In any other country, people would be protesting in the streets.

It's time for a radical change, and this starts at the top of the government.

2 ( +2 / -0 )

JAPAN is always late. The rest of the world had been like this way since I know. I am 61 years old.

1 ( +2 / -1 )

The solution for the pay-gap between low paid (contract) workers and full-time employees, is simply to get rid of full-time employees and only hire low paid contract workers...

There is that pay gap too, which I forgot in my post, but that one is 100% about people not being paid for merit. Having two pay scales (seiki and hi-seiki) for the same work is the complete opposite to merit-based pay.

2 ( +2 / -0 )

Will the incumbent and incompetent oyajis willing to adjust their pay to their merit ?

3 ( +3 / -0 )

A bellweather company sucking up workers from all over the country

is it out of tunes these days

as an automotive co in the far east

-1 ( +0 / -1 )

the change risks holding back the sort of blanket wage hikes the prime minister says are needed to inflate the economy.

Abe has been going on about these blanket salary increases for nearly a decade, but all he has done is give corporations tax cuts and given them more freedom to exploit their employees by 'urging' companies to increase salaries. He is the damn prime minister for flip's sake! He has the authority to demand salary increases, but does nothing about it. He's just a two-faced wimp!

2 ( +4 / -2 )

The solution for the pay-gap between low paid (contract) workers and full-time employees, is simply to get rid of full-time employees and only hire low paid contract workers...

0 ( +1 / -1 )

No talk of the government system reducing its expenditures.

Also, the mandatory retirement ages should be abolished so people can work as long as they wish. In my university education field, the wage difference between 20s and 60s is just a pittance, so this is not a factor, Kag-san.

2 ( +2 / -0 )

The widening gap between rich and poor is moving along at a faster clip...

0 ( +1 / -1 )

This is exactly what I expected when they were shifting towards this system. Now instead of annual pay hikes it would be raised based on production and hours.

0 ( +0 / -0 )

For workers, the shift would boost salaries of younger workers and potentially widen the country's wage gap.

This statement needs to point out which wage gap they are talking about. Within the same company, the most prominent wage gap will be between old and young regardless of merit. Paying young workers more based on merit would actually close that gap.

Paying elite workers more might increase some gap between them and people doing casual work, but the onus there is on people doing casual work to acquire more valuable skills. It is not Fujitsu's fault if 7-11 does not pay well.

2 ( +2 / -0 )

If the old workers are still unwilling to retire this problem will continue.

-4 ( +0 / -4 )

Workers already get a wage! Tax them more I say! Cup noodles are cheep and easy to get as are staff. More tax that's how to motivate people, lower the company tax more its ridiculousness for a profit making company's on actually pay tax. Let foreigners do the work and tax them too. Having a no responsibility government job it's obviously the best choice for my financial future. More work for you plebs less talk, get back to it, when you are 70 take a break and die. Raise tax....please.

1 ( +6 / -5 )

Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's government has been pushing for a more flexible labor market that would boost wages and revive consumption, but ironically, firms have also been asked to keep offering blanket pay rises.

Abenomics has been confused and ineffective, after promising talk in the early days that suggested reforms might be coming.

"Merit-based pay will create a pay gap between able workers and those who are not

That's how it works, otherwise the "able" workers (at least seen by someone as performing well) could skip off to greener fields elsewhere, if they are so inclined.

The growing rank of low-paid workers has led unionists to prioritize addressing the income gap between permanent employees and low-paid workers

Rather, they should demand the government reform labour laws to abolish the system of two-tiers of worker that makes this a problem in the first place.

4 ( +4 / -0 )

So the only pay raises people can actually get, wont be asked for any more.

In favor of merit based, where the company defines "merit". Yeah ok......

Bellwether auto giant Toyota Motor Corp's labor union is no longer seeking blanket pay rises, likely prompting others to follow suit.

5 ( +5 / -0 )

Lemme get this straight...

Wages have grown by 2 percent on average for the past six years. The labor market is extremely tight, and so companies are competing to attract employees, which means that wages are expected to continue to rise. However, the fact that companies want to compete more heavily for the most productive employees is a bad thing because....inflation...communism?

That's about all I can figure as explanations. Economically, across-the-board wage hikes make no sense unless you are seeking to inflate currency or are stubbornly wedded to an ideology. Companies risk locking themselves into expensive wage deals that eventually result in steeper layoffs and pension cuts when the economy hits trouble.

I can understand why the government desperately wants inflation--Japan's government debt is huge, and a shrinking population is not going to be able to sustain that debt. But wage inflation combined with currency inflation is not ever going to benefit workers. In the end, the government is robbing today's workers to pay for yesterday's debts.

3 ( +5 / -2 )

In that case they should raise corporate tax and lower consumption tax. Corporate taxes were supposedly lowered so that companies could pay higher wages.

9 ( +11 / -2 )

So unless a company has a sick pay policy (here in the UK we have statutory sick pay) then someone ill through no fault of their own won't be paid? It's only based on productivity? Isn't that sort of like sales people with that sort of system? It seems grossly unfair to me.

3 ( +4 / -1 )

For workers, the shift would boost salaries of younger workers and potentially widen the country's wage gap.

How will that widen the wage gap? In existing seniority based pay-raise system, isn't it the youth which is struggling the most to make ends meet? Youth poverty is one of the biggest reason of Japan's shrinking birth rate.

13 ( +15 / -2 )

Login to leave a comment

Facebook users

Use your Facebook account to login or register with JapanToday. By doing so, you will also receive an email inviting you to receive our news alerts.

Facebook Connect

Login with your JapanToday account

User registration

Articles, Offers & Useful Resources

A mix of what's trending on our other sites