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© KYODOOver 15% of Japan firms plan to hire more university graduates in 2024
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Zizi
Why young people in Japan would want to go straight into a Japanese company after graduation?? Utter madness and a big chance of a miserable life.
tora
Because if they don't then there is no way they will be hired by any of the major companies as full-time employees for life with all the benefits that brings. They would come back and have to work for "temp" agencies on short-term nonrenewable contracts. Or they could rock the boat and start the modern equivalent of Sony or Honda I suppose.
kurisupisu
I have heard that there are many students that are at a loss due to loss of networking and opportunities to socialise.
Also, the answer to that outmoded and regurgitated question can only be, "I did my best to stay sane!"
GBR48
If you survived the misery and isolation of a lockdown uni education without becoming psychotic, self-harming, quitting, bankrupting yourself or getting arrested, then you are probably tough enough for the stress, pressure and bullying that exist in the Japanese corporate workplace. Time for most to make their parents happy, kiss their youth goodbye and become another brick in the wall.
I guess parental/family pressure herds most of them into the fondling embrace of the zaibatsus. Having funded you all those years in the hope that you would make it into a job with an annual salary increase and then a pension, imagine the guilt should you choose to do your own thing at the very last hurdle.
There are heaps of small/family businesses in Japan, but business is tough (especially now, in many sectors) and most would see a corporate career as offering security, even if it comes at a price. It's difficult to argue with the logic of this. I certainly work longer hours for much less money than I would get as a corporate wage slave, and the last few years have been especially brutal.
The JP employment market has only taken baby steps towards reforming workplace (im)mobility, despite endless polite requests from DMs, PMs etc. Wander off the yellow brick road and part time work promises low wages and insecurity, the black companies and love hotels being the default fallbacks should you trip.
Is the individual that breaks parental hearts and strikes out to build an empire with their Internet of Things thing, new spin on crypto or app, brave or foolish? Most in Japan would consider them to be foolish. And unfilial. And maybe crazy too.
Unfortunately, the mass hiring (a bit like a Moonie wedding), drains the wider employment market of talent. Many of these newbies will be spare cogs in the big wheels of Japan Inc., underutilised and unnecessary. Smaller companies would benefit much more from having them. Rather like all those Man City and Chelsea players that are bought and go straight out on loan, perhaps the corporates could lend their surplus staff out to other companies to gain experience. That might help them secure their supply chains.
kurisupisu
Further vocational (I feel) training is a must before being dominated by the company paradigm which prevents free thinking.
He can then have the skills to transfer to other companies and possess the power and freedom to breakout of any toxic situation that he finds himself in