Tokyo commuters bound for Olympic
crowd crush as Japan Inc rules out work from home
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[February 18, 2020]
By Chris Gallagher
TOKYO (Reuters) - When Emi Tanimura
failed to find a daycare slot for her new-born daughter, she had to
take a radical step for Japan to avoid a long time away from her job
at communications firm Sunny Side Up <2180.T>. She started working
from home.
Now a mother of two, she still works flexible hours, including time
at home, as director of the Sunny Side Up president's office - with
her boss's blessing - taking care of both her family
responsibilities and career.
Tanimura is a rare exception to the rule in hard-driving corporate
Japan, where employees often feel pressured to put in long hours in
the office.
In a Reuters poll, 83% of Japanese companies said they don't
currently allow employees to work from home. And 73% of firms
surveyed said they aren't considering allowing what Japan often
refers to as 'telework', or telecommuting, during this summer's
Tokyo Olympic Games, according to the survey conducted from Jan. 30
to Feb. 12.
"To be honest, at first I felt sorry because everyone was working in
the office and only I was at home," Tanimura said at the company's
headquarters, just over a five-minute walk from the new Olympic
stadium. "But I was being evaluated in terms of whether I achieved
results ... my performance didn't decline."
The aversion to allowing work from home is unwelcome news for the
government, which wants companies to let their employees telecommute
during the Olympics to make travel easier for Games participants and
spectators on Tokyo's notoriously packed trains and roadways.
It also points to a potential headache amid growing concern about
the coronavirus epidemic that had killed nearly 1,800 in mainland
China as of Monday and has spread to a number of countries in Asia
including Japan. While companies elsewhere are drawing up
contingency plans with large portions of staff working from home in
a bid to contain the virus, most Japanese firms would have to
implement radical change to follow suit.
The push to encourage working from home chimes with a broader
campaign by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's government urging more
flexible work hours to make it easier for women with children to
take up jobs as Japan battles a severe labour shortage because of
its fast-aging population.
Parissa Haghirian, a professor of international management at Sophia
University in Tokyo, said she wasn't surprised by the survey results
because of structural issues found in traditional white-collar
Japanese offices that favor hiring workers with general skillsets,
rather than specialists, who are moved between divisions every few
years.
Haghirian said the switching of roles leaves general workers needing
more collective support: Work processes are not as clearly defined
and documented as in Western companies, making it harder to work
independently. A culture accustomed to group interaction also plays
a part.
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Passengers wait for a train on a platform at a station in Kawasaki,
Japan, June 14, 2017. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon/File Photo
"You have this structure where people are always there (in the
workplace) and do everything together. That strongly affects how
people see work and do their work," Haghirian said. "It's very
difficult to change that."
NO KNOW-HOW
To be sure, some survey respondents said they were not considering
introducing telework during the Olympics because their businesses
required them to be in physical locations - such as retail stores -
or they were not based in Tokyo.
But others said they simply did not have a flexible-work policy in
place, or did not have the technological set-up to allow people to
work remotely.
"We don't have any telework know-how," one manager at a machinery
maker wrote in response to the survey.
Still, some early adopters are bucking the trend.
Staffing services firm Pasona <2168.T> implemented its flexible-work
program in 2017, offering telecommuting from home or satellite
offices to its roughly 10,000 group employees.
Employees receive a laptop that requires fingerprint authentication
and must take an online training course and pass a test in order to
be eligible, said Akiko Hosokawa, general manager of Pasona's human
resources division.
Pasona is still considering specifics for the Olympic period,
Hosokawa said. The company is currently urging employees worried
about the coronavirus to take advantage of off-peak commuting rather
than travel in rush hours, she said.
Elsewhere, companies including drinks giant Asahi Group Holdings
<2502.T> and tech conglomerate Fujitsu <6702.T> said they would
encourage employees to telecommute during the Olympics to avoid
travel to the office.
And Sunny Side Up said employees like Tanimura would be
telecommuting during the entire Olympic and Paralympic periods
because of its location close to the Olympic stadium.
(Reporting by Chris Gallagher; Editing by Kenneth Maxwell)
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