Work stoppages and no chatting at lunch: Japan Inc grapples with COVID
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[August 05, 2022] By
Rocky Swift and Satoshi Sugiyama
TOKYO (Reuters) - Japanese companies are
temporarily shutting offices or suspending production as they battle a
record wave of COVID-19, disrupting businesses in a country that has
until now weathered the pandemic better than most advanced economies.
Automakers Toyota Motor Corp and Daihatsu Motor Co last week halted
production line shifts because of employee infections. KFC Holdings
Japan Ltd has had to shut some fast-food restaurants and move staff to
fill gaps, while Japan Post Holdings Co has temporarily shut more than
200 mailing centres.
Japan's tally of COVID cases has surged past those of other countries as
the full impact of the BA.4 and BA.5 variants dominating around the
world hits home. Japan had more than 1.4 million new COVID cases over
the past week, World Health Organization data showed.
Companies are scrambling to cope.
"We have divided the meal time into several time slots and have told
workers to sit in one direction and not to talk at all," Subaru Corp CFO
Katsuyuki Mizuma told reporters recently, describing how the automaker
was trying to fend off infections and work stoppages.
Newly diagnosed COVID cases reached an all-time high for Japan of almost
250,000 on Wednesday. Hospitalisations and deaths are on the rise too
but not as drastically as in previous waves because of the prevalence of
vaccinations and booster shots.
Japan has had an enviable record in its response to COVID, avoiding the
disruptive lockdowns and big death tolls that have accompanied the
pandemic elsewhere.
The country of 125.8 million people has had more than 32,000 deaths, a
fraction of the tolls in the United States and Britain, for example.
The latest outbreak will likely show whether it can maintain its
flexible response aimed at "living with corona" and limiting the
economic impact, particularly if the disruption now being felt gets
worse of lasts for an extended period.
"There is still a shortage of semiconductors and the spread of the
coronavirus is currently increasing," a Toyota spokesperson said last
week.
"The future remains unpredictable."
Health authorities advise that those who test positive should quarantine
for 10 days and their close contacts should isolate for at least five.
Toshihiro Nagahama, chief economist at the Dai-ichi Life Group, said
production and retail would feel some pain as infected people and their
close contacts stay at home.
"As infections and close contacts increase, that will certainly weigh on
people's confidence to go out for meals, shopping and the like," he
said.
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People wearing protective masks make their way amid the coronavirus
disease (COVID-19) pandemic at a business district in Tokyo, Japan
August 4, 2020. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon
SUPPLY CHAINS
The disruption has particularly important implications for a job market at its
tightest in decades, especially for the small and medium-sized enterprises that
make up the majority of Japan's companies.
Yoshiaki Katsuda an occupational health expert at the Kansai University of
Social Welfare, said big companies can hire temporary workers to replace those
who have to take time off but they are still vulnerable to supply chain
headaches.
"If smaller companies that supply products ... have to shut down for a long
period, then the production of bigger companies could be affected," he said.
The wave of infections is snarling transport too.
Railway operator Kyushu Railway Co suspended 120 train services in southern
Japan last week when 53 crew members tested positive or where close contacts of
cases. Mitsui O.S.K. Lines Ltd cancelled four ferry crossings in western Japan,
and bus operator OdakyuBus Co Ltd slashed dozens of routes around Tokyo.
The central government has devolved authority on infection controls to
prefectural governments, letting them step up precautions as they see fit.
Twelve prefectures have enacted the measures with a focus on curbing risks to
the elderly.
Support for Prime Minister Fumio Kishida has sagged in recent polls as COVID
surged, but a strong showing for the ruling Liberal Democratic Party in
elections last month has given him some breathing room, said Tetsuya Inoue, a
senior researcher at Nomura Research Institute.
"For the moment, Mr Kishida and his administration are prioritising the
maintenance of economic activities rather than to return to very strict measures
against COVID," Inoue said.
Inoue said that whatever the drag on the domestic economy that the wave of
infections is causing, the bigger problem for Japan was lockdowns in China and
the knock-on effects that they have on supply chains.
Relief for Japan's companies and the wider economy could be in sight. Health
experts project this wave of infection to peak early this month.
"Given current trends, it is unlikely that infections will continue to expand
over the long term, and there is little need to impose strict behavioural
restrictions," doctors at the Tokyo Foundation for Policy Research wrote in a
recent paper.
(Reporting by Rocky Swift, Satoshi Sugiyama, Mariko Yamazaki and Nobuhiro Kubo;
Editing by David Dolan and Robert Birsel)
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