Japan's crackdown on truck driver overtime raises fears of economic
breakdown
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[April 07, 2023] By
Mariko Katsumura and Satoshi Sugiyama
TOKYO (Reuters) - Truck driver Yuichi Tomita has been delivering
packages all over Japan for two decades, often clocking 40 straight
hours on the road. He says the work is tough but a source of pride, and
one he's never thought of quitting - until now.
On April 1, 2024, the government will limit truck drivers' annual
overtime to 960 hours, among other reforms officials say are meant to
improve the job's notoriously gruelling conditions and make it more
attractive.
Drivers such as Tomita say the law will instead lead to an exodus from
an occupation where most need those extra hours to pay the bills.
That has sparked fears of what those in retail and logistics call the
"2024 crisis": a critical shortage of truck drivers that, if
unaddressed, could leave a third of all cargo undelivered and result in
a potential 10 trillion yen ($76 billion) hit to the world's
third-largest economy by 2030, by government estimates.
"I've been doing this job for 20 years and you just can't make ends meet
on base pay alone," said Tomita, a second-generation trucker and father
of a 3-year-old. "I really think this crisis is going to threaten
Japan's economy and families like ours."
Drivers make 4.46 million yen ($34,000) a year on average. That is about
10% below the average for all industries despite working 20% longer
hours.
An expected drop-off in the number of truck drivers would set off a
domino effect for farmers, shops and diners accustomed to next-day
delivery of fresh fish and crisp produce.
The global consultancy Roland Berger expects a 20% decline in the number
of Japanese truck drivers in the decade to 2030.
"Simply put, people in Tokyo will have no means to get fresh vegetables
or fish from Kyushu (in southern Japan) and other far-off regions," said
Masashi Onozuka, a partner at consultancy
Roland Berger who serves on the government's study group for
sustainable logistics systems. "That could affect consumer spending and
other areas too."
SQUEEZED
About 98% of Japan's 62,000 trucking companies - responsible for
delivering almost all of the country's cargo - are small operations.
Fierce competition and high fuel prices mean truck drivers are squeezed
too despite an acute labour shortage.
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Delivery trucks are parked at a parking
area along the highway in Chiba, east of Tokyo, Japan April 6, 2023.
REUTERS/Issei Kato
A recent government survey showed trucking companies were able to
pass on only 19% of their cost increases, compared with 47% for
small- and medium-sized firms. That would make it difficult for
small companies to hire to make up for the lower number of legal
working hours per driver.
Underscoring the difficulties smaller players face, the Fair Trade
Commission in December named and shamed 13 firms that it said abused
their superior bargaining power to refuse price increase requests
from smaller contractors and suppliers. Six were logistics and
delivery majors, including Trancom and Sagawa Express. Both
companies promised to make improvements.
Prime Minister Fumio Kishida last month instructed his cabinet to
come up with "drastic" measures by June to address the crisis. A
dedicated lane over a 100km (62-mile) stretch of highway connecting
Tokyo and Nagoya for self-driving trucks and a flight route for
delivery drones are planned from next fiscal year.
Some retailers have devised ways to soften the impact.
Convenience store operator Lawson will reduce deliveries of lunch
boxes to twice a day from three times for all outlets by April 2024.
Supermarket chain operators Summit, Maruetsu, Yaoko and Life Corp
agreed to allow an extra day for delivery and reduce overnight
shipping.
Many far-flung producers, though, have no plan.
Farmers and fish wholesalers from Kyushu to the northernmost island
of Hokkaido fear for their livelihood and local economies if there
aren't enough drivers.
Masaaki Iwamori, an official at the Ehime Fishers Cooperative on the
western island of Shikoku, said the town of Uwajima could wither
without trucks to deliver its famed amberjack by 2 a.m. to Tokyo's
main fish market, a 12-hour drive away.
"If the fish aren't ready in time, they lose their freshness when
they're auctioned the next day" at a significant discount, he said.
"Maybe once consumers start noticing the drop in quality, they'll
share the sense of crisis."
($1 = 131.3800 yen)
(Reporting by Mariko Katsumura and Satoshi Sugiyama; Editing by
Chang-Ran Kim and Gerry Doyle)
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