HRM 603 - Comparative Studies in Industrial & Employment Relations
HRM 603 - Comparative Studies in Industrial & Employment Relations
HRM 603 - Comparative Studies in Industrial & Employment Relations
Topic 4:
EMPLOYMENT RELATIONS
IN JAPAN
Lecture outline
• Key themes
• Context
• The ‘Japanese’ model
• Union growth and decline
• The end of lifetime employment?
• Employers and their associations
• Collective bargaining
• Current issues
• Changes in labour market institutions: globalisation of firms and
corporate governance
• Growth of atypical employment
• Long working time
• Conclusions
Key themes
• The Japanese model – ‘lifetime employment’, seniority with merit-
based pay, and enterprise unionism – has been under pressure in recent
years
• Key changes include the growth of overseas activities by Japanese
multinational companies, the deregulation of corporate laws and the
rise of non-standard employment
• Contemporary Japanese employment relations are relatively stable, and
relations between labour and management are generally cooperative
(but the number of individual labour disputes is growing)
• Union membership is declining and a range of social, economic and
labour trends pose challenges to the future of unions
• The growth of non-regular employment has been linked to increasing
inequality and poverty, and raises questions about how to protect the
employment and working conditions of atypical workers who are not
represented by trade union
Employment relations context 1
• Japan is one of the largest economies in the world. It has a
labour force of 66 million and in 2012 it had a labour force
participation rate of 74%.
• Since the burst of the ‘bubble’ economy in 1991, the
Japanese economy has been grappling with low growth and
mild deflation. Nominal wages diminished slightly over the
last two decades
• The declining fertility rate and ageing population are major
issues for the future
• Japan’s unemployment rates were among the lowest in the
world until the 1990s. After having reached 5.4% in 2002,
the rate went down to 4% in 2013
Employment relations context 2
• Politics are dominated by the conservative Liberal
Democratic Party (LDP). After the dismal interlude of
the Democratic Party (2009-2012), the government of
Shinzo Abe (LDP) pursues an aggressive monetary
policy in order to stimulate the economy and to stop
the deflationary trend which has been at work for the
last two decades
• Deery, S and Plowman, D, 1985. Australia Industrial Relations, 2nd edn, McGraw-Hill Book
Company, Sydney.
• Moore, JB, 1987. Students brief: Japanese Industrial Relations, Labour and Industry, vol 1,
no.1, October, pp.140-155