Understanding Industrial Relations in Modern Japan

Understanding Industrial Relations in Modern Japan
Author: Kazuo Koike
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan
Total Pages: 306
Release: 1988-05-04
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9780333426876

This book denies the cultural uniqueness of Japanese industrial relations and economy, characterised by permanent employment, seniority wages and enterprise unionism. The author provides an entirely new explanation of Japanese workers' high morale and Japan's impressive economic performance which, he argues, results from skilled employees working against a background of high technology. The argument of the book is based on intensive field-work, consisting of a series of interviews with veteran workers on the shop floor, and on an explicit comparative study between the USA and Japan.

Inequality in the Workplace

Inequality in the Workplace
Author: Jiyeoun Song
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Total Pages: 231
Release: 2014-02-06
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 0801471001

The past several decades have seen widespread reform of labor markets across advanced industrial countries, but most of the existing research on job security, wage bargaining, and social protection is based on the experience of the United States and Western Europe. In Inequality in the Workplace, Jiyeoun Song focuses on South Korea and Japan, which have advanced labor market reform and confronted the rapid rise of a split in labor markets between protected regular workers and underprotected and underpaid nonregular workers. The two countries have implemented very different strategies in response to the pressure to increase labor market flexibility during economic downturns. Japanese policy makers, Song finds, have relaxed the rules and regulations governing employment and working conditions for part-time, temporary, and fixed-term contract employees while retaining extensive protections for full-time permanent workers. In Korea, by contrast, politicians have weakened employment protections for all categories of workers.In her comprehensive survey of the politics of labor market reform in East Asia, Song argues that institutional features of the labor market shape the national trajectory of reform. More specifically, she shows how the institutional characteristics of the employment protection system and industrial relations, including the size and strength of labor unions, determine the choice between liberalization for the nonregular workforce and liberalization for all as well as the degree of labor market inequality in the process of reform.

Changes in Japanese Employment Practices

Changes in Japanese Employment Practices
Author: Arjan Keizer
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 217
Release: 2010-01-21
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 1135233470

Keizer examines changing employment practices in Japan, focusing on the position of the Japanese firm that is confronted with the need to address the changing economic circumstances while also maintaining some fit with the wider set of institutions that govern the Japanese labour market.

The Embedded Corporation

The Embedded Corporation
Author: Sanford M. Jacoby
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Total Pages: 235
Release: 2007-07-22
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 0691133840

The author traces the enduring diversity of corporate culture in Japan and the U.S. to national differences in economic history and social norms, and, paradoxically, to global competition itself.

Japan Works

Japan Works
Author: John Price
Publisher: Ithaca, NY. : LR Press
Total Pages: 344
Release: 1997
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN:

Price probes the paradoxes in postwar labor-management relations, particularly in the years between 1945 and 1975. Basing his analysis on the history of labor in Mitsui's Miike mine in Kyushu, Suzuki Motors in Hamamatsu, and Moriguchi City Hall, the author questions the common interpretation that industrial relations are based on lifetime jobs, seniority-based wages, and enterprise unions. He also asks whether Japanese workers have been genuinely empowered by the developments in recent years.

Collective Bargaining in Labour Law Regimes

Collective Bargaining in Labour Law Regimes
Author: Ulla Liukkunen
Publisher: Springer Nature
Total Pages: 619
Release: 2019-10-02
Genre: Law
ISBN: 3030169774

This book addresses the theme of collective bargaining in different legal systems and explores legal framework of collective bargaining as well as the role of different bargaining models in domestic labour law systems in altogether twenty-one jurisdictions throughout the world. Recent development of collective bargaining regimes can be viewed as part of a larger development of labour law models that face increasing challenges caused by globalization and transition of work and workplaces. The book places particular emphasis on identifying and examining most important development trends affecting domestic labour law regimes and collective bargaining and regulatory responses thereto. The analysis offered extents to transnational dimension of collective bargaining. As the chapters analyse the influence of the legal frameworks of collective bargaining in different countries they provide unique comparative insight into the topic which is central to understanding the function of labour law.

Women's Employment in Japan

Women's Employment in Japan
Author: Kaye Broadbent
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 182
Release: 2012-11-12
Genre: History
ISBN: 1136133461

The low status accorded to part-time workers in Japan has resulted in huge inequalities in the workplace. This book examines the problem in-depth using case-study investigations in Japanese workplaces, and reveals the extent of the inequality. It shows how many part-time workers, most of whom are women, are concentrated in low paid, low skilled, poorly unionised service sector jobs. Part-time workers in Japan work hours equivalent to, or greater than, full-time workers, but receive lower financial and welfare benefits than their full-time colleagues. Overall, the book demonstrates that the way part-time work is constructed in Japan reinforces and institutionalises the sexual division of labour.

Japanese Industrial Relations

Japanese Industrial Relations
Author: Taishirō Shirai
Publisher: 日本労働研究機構
Total Pages: 176
Release: 2000-03-31
Genre: Reference
ISBN:

Discusses the Japanese labour relations system, focusing on the role of workers, employers, and the government in shaping industrial relations.

The Wages of Affluence

The Wages of Affluence
Author: Andrew Gordon
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Total Pages: 296
Release: 2001-11-15
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9780674037816

Andrew Gordon goes to the core of the Japanese enterprise system, the workplace, and reveals a complex history of contest and confrontation. The Japanese model produced a dynamic economy which owed as much to coercion as to happy consensus. Managerial hegemony was achieved only after a bitter struggle that undermined the democratic potential of postwar society. The book draws on examples across Japanese industry, but focuses in depth on iron and steel. This industry was at the center of the country's economic recovery and high-speed growth, a primary site of corporate managerial strategy and important labor union initiatives. Beginning with the Occupation reforms and their influence on the workplace, Gordon traces worker activism and protest in the 1950s and '60s, and how they gave way to management victory in the 1960s and '70s. He shows how working people had to compromise institutions of self-determination in pursuit of economic affluence. He illuminates the Japanese system with frequent references to other capitalist nations whose workplaces assumed very different shape, and looks to Japan's future, rebutting hasty predictions that Japanese industrial relations are about to be dramatically transformed in the American free-market image. Gordon argues that it is more likely that Japan will only modestly adjust the status quo that emerged through the turbulent postwar decades he chronicles here.