Die japanische Regierung legte einen Vorschlagsentwurf zur Einstellung von 1,23 Millionen ausländischen Arbeitskräften für die nächsten drei Jahre vor.

https://news.yahoo.co.jp/articles/06f4adee2f4d9dd1ec1019f61f530912a6387841

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5 Kommentare

  1. search_google_com on

    On the 23rd, the government presented a draft proposal to a panel of experts regarding the new foreign talent acceptance system, „Development Employment,“ which will replace the Technical Intern Training Program. The proposal sets a two-year limit of approximately 426,000 people for the two years starting in fiscal 2027, when the program begins. The existing „Specified Skilled Worker“ system, which is intended to replace the Development Employment Program, will have a cap of approximately 805,000 people by the end of fiscal 2028, a downward revision of the limit set in 2024. The proposal calls for a combined total of approximately 1,231,000 people to be accepted under both programs. Both programs are designed to accept foreigners needed to fill labor shortages.

    My thoughts: The number is too much high, if we consider that the PM is popular for her anti-inmigration stance.

  2. Infinite-Actuary-643 on

    Thats going to be interesting, however many Japanese people in Japan do pass away every year (Approximately 1.5 million )

  3. xaltairforever on

    Digging themselves deeper aren’t they ? No one wants to work for here for low wages and constant abuse.

  4. Akakumaningen on

    Some realistic policy coming from the LDP. Japan needs these migrants to fill labor shortages and most of them go into careers where local labor supply simply is not enough like nursing, care work, factory work, trucking, construction, hospitality sector and so on.

    For rural areas of Japan immigration is vital as young locals usually stay until they graduate from high school (local university) and then they try their luck in Tokyo or another big city of Japan.

    But Japan should study the problems Migration caused in Europe carefully and formulate policies to prevent that from happening, while still keeping doors open to vital migration.

  5. Even autonomous driving alone will likely make at least 10% of foreign personnel unnecessary already.

    Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi is, unusually for a Japanese politician, a believer in technology, so she likely won’t hesitate to have AI handle things.

    Even before the AI era, Japanese people had already become completely accustomed to unmanned checkout registers, and checkout staff have almost disappeared; it’s already been implemented as a matter of course that one person manages 30 registers.

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