Japan looks to accept more foreigners in key policy shift
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[November 18, 2021]
TOKYO (Reuters) -In a major shift
for a country long closed to immigrants, Japan is looking to allow
foreigners in certain blue-collar jobs to stay indefinitely starting as
early as the 2022 fiscal year, a justice ministry official said on
Thursday.
Under a law that took effect in 2019, a category of "specified skilled
workers" in 14 sectors such as farming, nursing care and sanitation have
been granted visas but stays have been limited to five years and without
family members for workers in all but the construction and shipbuilding
sectors.
Companies had cited those restrictions among reasons they were hesitant
to hire such help , and the government had been looking to ease those
restrictions in the other fields.
If the revision takes effect, such workers - many from Vietnam and China
- would be allowed to renew their visas indefinitely and bring their
families with them.
Top government spokesman Hirokazu Matsuno stressed, however, that any
such change would not mean automatic permanent residency, which would
require a separate application process.
Immigration has long been taboo in Japan as many prize ethnic
homogeneity, but pressure has mounted to open up its borders due to an
acute labour shortage given its dwindling and ageing population.
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Workers from Thailand work at Green Leaf farm, in Showa Village,
Gunma Prefecture, Japan, June 6, 2018. Picture taken June 6, 2018.
REUTERS/Malcolm Foster/File Photo
"As the shrinking population becomes a more serious
problem and if Japan wants to be seen as a good option for overseas
workers, it needs to communicate that it has the proper structure in
place to welcome them," Toshihiro Menju, managing director of think
tank Japan Center for International Exchange, told Reuters.
The 2019 law was meant to attract some 345,000 "specified skilled
workers" over five years, but the intake has hovered at around 3,000
per month before the COVID-19 pandemic sealed the borders, according
to government data.
As of late 2020, Japan housed 1.72 million foreign workers, out of a
total population of 125.8 million and just 2.5% of its working
population.
(Reporting by Ami Miyazaki and Kantaro Komiya, Writing by Chang-Ran
Kim; Editing by Michael Perry)
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