Japan yesterday unveiled a plan to attract more foreign blue-collar workers, as the world’s No. 3 economy battles a crippling labor shortage caused by an aging and shrinking population.
The plan aims to fill gaping shortages in sectors such as agriculture, nursing, construction, hotels and shipbuilding.
Under the draft legislation, foreign nationals with skills in fields identified as facing shortages would be awarded a visa allowing them to work for up to five years.
Photo: AFP
Foreign workers in those fields who hold stronger qualifications and pass a Japanese-language test will also be allowed to bring family members and can obtain permanent residency status.
Government spokesman Yoshihide Suga told reporters that the bill would be submitted to parliament “at the earliest possible time,” with a possible launch in April.
Japan has traditionally been cautious about accepting unskilled workers from abroad and limits residential status to highly skilled professionals.
The only exception to this rule is for South Americans of Japanese descent.
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s government has said the reforms are not intended as a wholesale overhaul of Japanese immigration policy, and mass immigration is not expected.
Japan will not rely heavily on foreign immigrants and the policy “remains unchanged,” Suga said, when asked if this represented a drastic shift in immigration policy toward accepting a large number of foreigners.
Businesses have long lobbied for looser immigration rules, saying they struggle to find workers in a country where unemployment hovers at about 2.5 percent and there are 163 job vacancies to every 100 job seekers.
The government has not set a target for foreign workers under the new proposals, although local media put the figure at more than 500,000 people by 2025.
According to government figures, there were 1.28 million foreign workers in Japan last year — twice as many as a decade ago.
However, more than 450,000 of those are foreign spouses of Japanese citizens, ethnic Koreans long settled in Japan, or foreigners of Japanese descent, rather than workers coming to Japan to seek jobs.
Another 300,000 are students, who are allowed to work part-time during their studies, but are expected to return home afterwards.
Japan had fewer than 240,000 foreign skilled workers and just more than 250,000 foreign trainees in the country late last year, according to government figures.
It has bilateral deals admitting limited numbers of nurses and care workers from other parts of Asia.
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