Category Archives: Social

NEW PUBLICATION: “Europe Japan Industrial Relations 2015 – working together for a better future”

"Europe Japan Industrial Relations 2015 - working together for a better future"

“Europe Japan Industrial Relations 2015 – working together for a better future”

 

Hello everyone,

GBMC has just released a new publication, which we would like to submit to your attention.  (Constructive) comments are welcome!

Please do not consider this as “spam”, as you do not have to buy anything (but, of course, you are welcome to)  and as there is a free sample available (13 Interviews) for your reading!!!

More info from our website at:

“Europe Japan Industrial Relations 2015 – working together for a better future”

 


Japan is changing: Historic (female) appointment at the “Keidanren” board !

Haruno Yoshida (photo by Alfie Goodrich)

Haruno Yoshida (photo by Alfie Goodrich)

 

“Earlier this year, BT Japan president and representative director Haruno Yoshida made history, when she was appointed to the Keidanren, the Japan Business Federation. In accepting the nomination, Yoshida became the first woman ever named to the influential and conservative business lobby group.” (EUROBIZ Japan)

Read more from:

Historic (female) appointment at the “Keidanren” board !

 


Japan: more women working in a two-tiered labour market!

two-tiered labour market

Japan: two-tiered labour market

 

“The problem is that women, though they are going to work, are mostly getting dead-end jobs. More than two-thirds of female labor force entrants, in fact, are climbing onto this slow track, meaning that they are destined to be second-class economic citizens for the rest of their working lives. Meanwhile, male entrants are given fast-track jobs at a much higher rate.

So the labor system is a sort of caste system, with a mostly female lower level and a mostly male upper strata. In some sense, this is progress, because women are no longer confined to the home, and now that they are in the workforce, women will undoubtedly demand better jobs.

But the sclerotic nature of this two-tiered labor market is a huge and continuing drag and it should be next on Abe’s hit list. Gender equality demands it, but so does the economic health of the nation, since the impossibility of advancing from the lower track to the upper track amounts to an enormous misallocation of talent and skill.” (Noath Smith, Bloomberg/Japan Times)

Read more from:

Japan: more women working in a two-tiered labour market!


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