Posted in: Japan eyes new residency status for foreigners amid labor shortages See in context
I would think that such scheme to bring foreign labor with so many restrictions (limited in time, no family, language requirements useless outside Japan, low pay, limited opportunities...) would not be very attractive, especially when other developed countries are also courting the same manual workers…. But is there any way to gauge whether these conditions are actually attractive for foreign laborers? Or any statistics on the success of the current “training program schemes”?
4 ( +4 / -0 )
Posted in: X owner Musk says he opposes U.S. ban of competitor TikTok
Just don't put blame on Carlos Ghosn this time.
Posted in: Nissan lowers FY2023 net profit forecast on weak sales volume
Posted in: Trump jury set for opening arguments; man self-immolates outside
316-94. These 94 are the opposite of patriots and a clear minority. They should be dispensed with.
Posted in: Ukraine, Israel aid advances in rare House vote as Democrats help Republicans push it forward