Fewer workers, higher
wages: Japan Inc feels demographic pinch
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[March 02, 2017]
By Malcolm Foster and Yoshiyuki Osada
TOKYO
(Reuters) - Ask the president of Japan's largest daycare chain what his
biggest headache is, and Kazuhiro Ogita doesn't hesitate: workers and
wage costs. Not enough of one, too much of the other.
Unable to hire enough employees to staff its nurseries at a time of
strong demand, JP-Holdings Inc is paying more overtime and bringing in
part-time workers to fill shifts. That's eating into its bottom line - a
trend seen across Japan's labor intensive industries, from delivery
companies to restaurants and even the 400,000-employee strong postal
system.
Average pay for temporary workers in Japan's three biggest cities in
December rose 2.1 percent from a year earlier to 1,006 yen ($8.83) per
hour - a fifth monthly record. Pay for forklift drivers jumped 13.8
percent and hotel clerks rose 4 percent.
According to Reuters' analysis of the financial results at 193 major
companies, labor costs as a portion of overall sales are at their
highest level in at least five years.
This is happening even as rank-and-file workers see their base pay
flatline, despite Prime Minister Shinzo Abe urging firms to lift wages
to boost consumer spending - raising the prospect of an economy where
costs rise but growth stagnates.
For some companies, the labor crunch is forcing them to adapt and become
more productive. Manufacturers are using more automation and robots, and
construction companies and convenience stores are hiring more foreign
workers, from a restricted pool.
These aren't options for all companies. JP-Holdings needs qualified
teachers who have passed rigorous exams in Japanese. The resulting
impact on costs has prompted the company to slash its operating profit
forecast for the year through March by a third, to 1.05 billion yen
($9.3 million) versus 1.8 billion yen a year earlier.
"We can’t rely on robots to care for children," Ogita said. "We have
more space - we just don't have the teachers to fill them. It's a lost
business opportunity for us."
Delivery service Yamato Holdings Co, known in Japan for its black cat
logo, is also scrambling, even while offering higher wages.
Thanks to the internet shopping boom, Yamato's parcel volume and sales
climbed in the last nine months of the financial year - yet higher labor
costs cut operating profit for the period by 6.5 percent.
"We simply can't get adequate staffing," said Yasuo Katayama, general
secretary of the company's 60,000-member union. "The company has said it
will do something, but it hasn't been enough. We need the management to
reconsider the parcel volume."
SHRINKING POOL
Hardest hit are small and medium-sized businesses, which have less cash
to invest. Two-thirds of companies with 100-300 employees said they are
facing labor shortages, up from 59 percent a year ago, according to a
survey by the Japan Chamber of Commerce and Industry.
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The logo of Yamato Transport Co is pictured at a business district
in Tokyo, Japan, February 9, 2017. REUTERS/Toru Hanai
But
even businesses like Japan Post, the privatized postal system, are struggling.
"You ask the head of any company these days what their No. 1 problem is, and
it's labor shortage and higher (wage) costs," said CEO Masatsugu Nagato. "We
have 400,000 employees, so this is a huge problem for us."
Operating profit at Japan Post’s postal and logistics businesses fell by more
than half to 2.1 billion yen for the nine months through December, as labor
costs and pension changes took a bite.
And there is little to encourage optimism. Japan's working-age population, which
shrank to 75.9 million in 2015 from a peak of 87.2 million in 1995, is expected
to drop to 44 million by 2060.
Foreign workers are making up some of the shortfall - last year numbers topped 1
million for the first time. But the government is reluctant to ease restrictions
too much amid social and political resistance, and Abe has encouraged companies
to first hire more women and older workers.
Language and qualification barriers also create obstacles. Ogita, head of the
daycare chain, knows only one foreigner who has obtained the necessary childcare
qualifications.
One positive impact from the shortage, however, could be to narrow the pay gap
between salaried and non-salaried workers - something Abe's government has been
pushing for with an "equal time for equal pay" campaign.
Higher wages could also bring back more workers to the workforce, but what it
means for recovery and spending is far from certain.
"In the long run, the labor shortages could cause cost-push inflation or
stagflation, in which the cost of doing business keeps on rising, while the
economy stagnates," said Masaki Kuwahara, senior economist at Nomura Securities.
(Reporting by Malcolm Foster, Yoshiyuki Osada, Taiga Uranaka, Reiko Shimizu,
Izumi Nakagawa and Tetsushi Kajimoto in TOKYO and Gaurav Dogra in BANGALORE;
Editing by Clara Ferreira Marques and Lincoln Feast)
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