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A Filipino woman in Manila training to be a housekeeper for a job in Japan. Photo: Bloomberg

‘We are opening up our country’: Japan minister says country welcomes foreign workers

Foreign Minister Taro Kono said Tokyo is working on a new permit system

Japan

Japan is preparing to accept more foreign workers as its own population is on the brink of a steep decline, Foreign Minister Taro Kono said on Thursday.

Kono told a World Economic Forum meeting in Hanoi that Japan gains “value added” by accepting foreigners, especially since its ageing population and low birth rate mean the country is shrinking by half a million people a year.

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“We cannot sustain our society like that,” he said in response to a question during a panel discussion. “We are opening up our country. We are opening up our labour market to foreign countries. We are now trying to come up with a new work permit policy so I think everyone shall be welcome in Japan if they are willing to assimilate into Japanese society.”

Japan’s Foreign Minister Taro Kono speaking at the World Economic Forum in Hanoi on September 13, 2018. Photo: AFP

Japan has traditionally resisted accepting migrant workers, at times easing such restrictions but then re-imposing them during economic downturns. Many Japanese are uncomfortable with outsiders who might not speak their language or conform to expectations for how to behave.

Still, there are millions of foreigners living in Japan, including those who work in technical training-related programmes or labour-short industries such as restaurants, construction and elderly care.

The country has gradually been loosening restrictions to enable families to hire domestic helpers. It also has short programmes for foreign nurses from Indonesia and other countries. But language requirements have made long-term employment in such jobs difficult.

Japan to set up immigration agency to cope with influx of foreigners

Kono cited sport stars including tennis sensation Naomi Osaka, the daughter of a Japanese mother and a Haitian father, as an example of the benefits of welcoming outsiders. Osaka, who was born in Japan but raised in the United States, is being lauded by Japanese as the first player from the country to win a grand slam singles tennis title.

“It’s good to have diversity. It’s good to have an open policy,” Kono said.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Japan to accept more foreign workers, minister says
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