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Suga’s first growth strategy met with calls to tackle Japan’s chronic labor issues

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Covering topics from decarbonization and digital transformation to improving the nationтАЩs supply chain for microchips, the government laid out sweeping economic objectives Friday in its latest growth strategy.

While a slew of policies are leftovers from the previous administration, the Cabinet has also introduced some fresh items to the first new economic agenda to be issued under Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga.

Notably, the strategy has an increased focus on economic security amid growing geoeconomic risks due to tensions between the United States and China and as the pandemic exposes supply chain vulnerabilities for a number of products, including chips.

Japan will aim to reduce the risk of supply chain disruptions for vital products, such as semiconductors, medical items, batteries and rare earths. The strategy also notes the importance of attracting chip manufacturing bases to Japan, and looks to prop up the competitiveness of the chip industry.

The Suga administration is also looking to boost efforts toward decarbonization to achieve carbon neutrality by 2050, vowing to facilitate green innovation through a ┬е2 trillion fund and to adopt carbon pricing systems.

Although much of the spotlight tends to gravitate toward hot economic issues, economists say that it is critical тАФ and timely тАФ for Japan to work on its more deeply rooted problems.

The pandemic has devastated the economy for over a year, but it has also brought about drastic changes to Japanese society that would have taken years to realize otherwise, and those changes could actually be strong assets for SugaтАЩs economic policy.

тАЬWhether Japan can leverage experiences that it has gained from the pandemic is the key for the growth strategy,тАЭ said Shinichiro Kobayashi, economist at Mitsubishi UFJ Research and Consulting Co.

Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga holds a news conference in Tokyo on Thursday. | POOL / VIA AFP-JIJI
Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga holds a news conference in Tokyo on Thursday. | POOL / VIA AFP-JIJI

Adoption of telework is a prime example of a change that has been forced upon the nation due to the COVID-19 outbreak, and one that could help the country enhance productivity.

Even though work-style reform had been a pillar of JapanтАЩs recent economic policies тАФ and one that appeared repeatedly in past growth strategies prior to the pandemic тАФ it has never really moved forward at speed.

According to a survey by the Tokyo Metropolitan Government in July 2019, only 25.1% of companies in Tokyo had introduced telework systems.

But the health crisis forced businesses to adopt telework to avoid spreading the virus, and a metropolitan government survey conducted in April showed that the telework rate had jumped to 56.6% тАФ saving millions of people the time normally spent commuting over the past year.

Japan was probably able to accelerate the use of telework by four to five years, Kobayashi said.

Still, as the country steps up its vaccine rollout in order to return to normal, some are concerned that the countryтАЩs traditional work culture might return as well.

тАЬBig companies with enough financial resources have spent quite a lot to accelerate the shift (to the new normal) in the past year. I think these companies wonтАЩt turn back. But if many smaller firms go back to the way they used to be, they might clog the cogs of the economic system,тАЭ Kobayashi said.

For that reason, the government should offer specific support programs, including funding and technical help, he added.

Now that Japan has accelerated its progress on some policies, it is critical that the country tackle chronic problems like low labor productivity, economists said.

The governmentтАЩs focus on that issue is clear: ItтАЩs mentioned in the first part of the first chapter of the growth strategy.

Although the country has seen an improvement in its labor participation rate thanks to an increase in the number of working women and older people over the past several years, JapanтАЩs labor productivity remains the lowest among the Group of Seven wealthy nations, according to the strategy.

Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga attends a Cabinet meeting on Friday morning. The pandemic has devastated the economy for over a year, but it has also brought about drastic changes that could actually be strong assets for Suga's economic policy. | KYODO
Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga attends a Cabinet meeting on Friday morning. The pandemic has devastated the economy for over a year, but it has also brought about drastic changes that could actually be strong assets for SugaтАЩs economic policy. | KYODO

The Japan Productivity Center says the nationтАЩs labor productivity per worker declined by an average of 0.3% annually from 2015 to 2019 while the figure for the productivity per hour worked rose a mere 0.4% in the same period.

The growth strategy introduces some measures aimed at boosting work efficiency and flexibility by continuing to promote telework, encouraging firms to offer their employees the option of a four-day workweek and furthering the digitization push in the public sector.

Along with work-style reform, improving productivity is something that the government has stressed repeatedly for the past several years, but so far efforts have yet to bear fruit.

The experience has shown that if the government relies on the same method to carry out policies, it wonтАЩt really solve the problem, said Yasuhide Yajima, chief economist at NLI Research Institute.

тАЬThis was a problem during the Abe administration, too, but growth strategies did not really move forward, since deregulation efforts were really weak. I think the point is what kinds of deregulation the government will come up with.тАЭ

Presenting solid deregulation plans can demonstrate that Japan is finally ready to deal with its chronic issues.

For example, deregulation that will facilitate the adoption of telecommuting to take advantage of the new normal should be taken into account, said Yajima, as many people have experienced its merits, whether itтАЩs for work, health care or education.

It remains unclear how serious the Suga administration is about moving growth strategy policies forward, Yajima added.

For the immediate future, the government will likely have its hands full with curbing the COVID-19 situation. Also, a Lower House election must be held by the fall and an Upper House election will follow next summer.

тАЬThe situation will change once more people get vaccinated,тАЭ said Yajima. тАЬThat will be the time to keep a close watch on whether the Suga administration acceleratesтАж and drives forward the growth strategy.тАЭ

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