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4 - Hours of work, labor-force participation and the work ethic

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 December 2009

Ross Mouer
Affiliation:
Monash University, Victoria
Hirosuke Kawanishi
Affiliation:
Waseda University, Japan
Kawanishi Hirosuke
Affiliation:
Professor of Sociology, Waseda University, Tokyo
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Summary

How hard do the japanese work?

Well into the 1990s many foreigners and Japanese alike perceived that the Japanese were working harder than their counterparts in other advanced economies. This view was held not only by critics of Japan (who felt that Japanese worked too much), but also by advocates of the Japanese model who saw in long hours of work enviable levels of commitment to an employer. Many who associated long hours of work with high levels of motivation saw in Japan an approach to management that would take human resource management in Japan and other advanced societies into the twenty-first century.

Most assessments of how hard the Japanese work are implicitly comparative. To the extent that Japanese workers are perceived as working very hard, workers overseas come to be seen as not working hard enough. Lincoln and Kalleberg (1996) cite the short working hours of German employees as a major concern for Japanese managers stationed in that country. Japanese managers in Australia have been quick to fault Australians for not working hard enough (Meany et al. 1988; Mizukami 1993: 23). “Large, Lucky and Lazy” was the title of one study of Japanese managers who criticized Australian workers for their reluctance to work overtime or at the weekend (Ormonde 1992). Managers in other countries have taken such views on board, arguing that their employees should adopt what the managers see as being a superior work ethic.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2005

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