Why does Japan work so hard? | CNBC Explains

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Publicado 2018-05-31

Todos los comentarios (21)
  • @kitkat-bp9ho
    It is ironic that Japan has created games, mangas and anime but they don't have time to enjoy them.
  • @D0NTREPLY
    if i worked over 80hrs and not got paid for it. i'd burn down the building. thats truly messed up.
  • @thisissyedbasim
    Someone: My life is miserable Japanese workers: hold my work hours
  • @WorldTaxAndy
    I worked for a bank in Tokyo, and yes they work long hours but it was rarely working hard. A lot is due to the culture of hierarchy & saving 'face'. For example, we were told never to leave the office before your boss. A bit of an issue when you finished your work by 4pm and your boss is still there till 10pm! You have to find ways to occupy yourselves for those 6 hours. So on paper I worked a 14 hour day but in reality there was maybe only a few hours of actual productive stuff done. Another thing was endless meetings, worse than anything I've seen in the US or UK. And meetings are rarely productive due to the face saving aspect - it's generally bad etiquette to disagree strongly with someone in a meeting in front of others even if their ideas are terrible. The average Japanese salaryman also drinks extremely heavily. We would typically go out for dinner with our team 4 nights per week & we'd all get drunk - so most days a significant amount of staff are nursing hangovers. Again due to the hierarchy culture you can't really say no if your boss invites you out for dinner, which ends up being almost every night. It's really not a surprise to see Japan's productivity levels plummet over the past decades.
  • @aria1477
    Behind of japan successful story, we didn't see their failures, stress, anxiety, depression, frustration, dissatisfied, disappointment, etc. that end them to die or commit suicide.
  • @jqv002
    "This is why anime and manga are mostly during highschool, because after it, it gets worse." -some guy on a youtube video
  • @donaldduck9233
    He never actually discussed why they work so hard, he just expressed the fact that they do work hard.
  • @Truthseeker371
    I am Japanese and worked there for 15 years. I was the last to clock in and the first to clock out. I didn't work overtime. I organised my work and finish it as soon as possible. I believe in efficiency not lengthy waste. No bosses and co-workers criticised me. I took holidays and enjoyed both work and my personal life.
  • @rohitbumb9854
    They worked so hard for the future generations that they actually forgot to make future generations 😂😂
  • @keitakimoto4146
    Japanese Government and companies: “don’t work!” Japanese People: “No”
  • @hollypark2752
    I dont think people in Japan are necessarily working hard, they just have a crappy work culture that makes Japan great in some areas but crappy for work. if you look at their productivity, they are a lot lower than people expect. That indicates that the hours spent at work are time consuming and non-productive. it is a demoralizing when you have to spend extra hours to play up to management when youre not really doing anything anything productive just so you can fit in.
  • @ahmadalibaig7881
    “If working hard made you rich laborers would be millionaires”
  • @toru9094
    It's isn't work ethic that drives them to over work, it is fear. Fear, shame and guilt are all the fundamental aspects of Japanese society. They feel guilty for taking a paid vacation because they know that their colleagues would be working and they are fearful that the whole company would be resentful of that one individual that chooses to take the day off or leave work early. They are not actually working to finish work, they work to create more work so they don't ever have to finish working. This mentality starts young at school age and continues till they die from exhaustion and depression. It is only natural that their birth rate is declining.
  • @DG-tl1ii
    That's why Japan is literally a victim of her own success.
  • @ednastanford7945
    It's crazy how people think 3-5 years in trading is a long time to get rich, but don't think 40 years at a job is a long time to stay broke .
  • @damnryan5581
    I mean Japanese people are too polite. They don’t complain when they were young at school, so they think that stop working or resting are bad thing.
  • @GoGo-tk8ui
    I am Japanese who worked for Japanese company from1989-1993. Left Japan to NYC, working for myself happy. When I was in Japan, Co workers and I, we all worked hard 9am to 11pm every day including every other Saturday and half of the vacation days were not taken. I think they are so detail oriented, spending so much time on every details causing longer time to finish working.. Also we have group mentality (which is not always bad). So if everybody else are still working, you can not leave office.. Many of my girl friends built great carrier in well known company (they are fashion designers so women can be top level but not all industries are same for women), making good money. But they have nothing else. None of them are married (they wanted to be married if they could), not even one of them has boyfriend and they are in their 50th. Still working long hours after 25 years plus. It is my own beautiful country that I love and admire. But I can not live like them.
  • @lobopix_
    In his book The End Of Work (1996) Jeremy Rifkin wrote aboutJapan's 'Karoshi' system (= crash). Their production lines were calculatedly and continuously sped up until workers started to collapse (or crash) with exhaustion. When they determined that limit they would run the lines to just below the crash limit to keep people manically working but with minimal crashing (at least in the immediate term). It's so very clear that Amazon whole-heartedly embraced those Karoshi practices, no?
  • @spiderjump
    I have a friend who worked in a Japanese company for 10 plus years. He said the Japanese only appear to work hard . Long hours but often the workers just stay late without doing anything . Just checking details that has been gone over before. Minor changes in documents that make no difference .