Labor Policy Keiichiro HAMAGUCHI Chapter 2 Labor Market
Labor Policy Keiichiro HAMAGUCHI
Chapter 2 Labor Market Policy
Section 1 Public and Private Placement Services
(1) Regulation of private placement services and temporary work agencies in pre-war era • Japan’s placement service dates back Edo era. • 1921 Employment Placement Law put feecharging placement businesses under governor’s permit. • 1938 revised EP Law put labor supply businesses under governor’s permit. • Influence of ILO Recommendation No. 1
(2) Free employment placement services and public employment placement offices in the pre -war era • First free placement service (non-profit) established in 1901. • 1921 EP Law made placement offices under municipalities. • 1938 revised EP Law nationalized placement offices. • Renamed to national labor mobilization offices under war regime.
(3) Enactment of Employment Security Law – public employment placement services • 1947 Employment Security Law put public employment security offices of the State under governor’s supervision. • 1948 ILO Convention No. 88 required “national system of employment office. ” • Council for Regulatory Reform advocates privatization. • World trend is “welfare to work. ”
(4) Enactment of Employment Security Law – prohibition of fee-charging private placement businesses and labor supply businesses • 1947 ES Law prohibited most fee-charging placement businesses and all labor supply businesses. • 1933 ILO Convention No. 34 required abolition of these businesses. 1949 ILO Convention No. 96 relaxed it. • GHQ ordered eradication of labor bosses even in the form of sub-contract.
(5) Restrictive liberalization of temporary work agencies • Administrative Management Agency recommended the liberalization in 1978. • Ministry of Labor considered it at Study Group from 1978 to 1984. • Worker Dispatching Law enacted in 1985 • The business restricted in specific jobs (positive list system) • Regular type and registration type
(6) General liberalization of temporary work agencies • ILO Convention No. 188 deregulated the businesses in 1997. • Worker Dispatching Law revised in 1999 • From positive list system to negative list system (except for manufacturing) • Setting of upper limit on the duration (1 year)
(7) 2003 revision of the Law • Worker Dispatching Law revised again in 2003. • Worker Dispatching in manufacturing liberalized. • Extension of upper limit on the duration (from 1 year to 3 years).
(8) Further proposed deregulation • Council for Regulatory Reform advocates: • complete abolition of upper limit of 3 years, • abolition of obligation to propose direct employment, • abolition of prohibition of prior interview. • Council on Economic and Fiscal Policy also insists this policy. • 3. 21 million dispatched workers in 2006.
permanent registered total 1990 128, 197 382, 070 510, 267 1995 142, 717 469, 339 612, 056 2000 272, 843 1, 113, 521 1, 386, 364 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 298, 561 338, 594 375, 406 421, 200 455, 782 866, 501 1, 449, 352 1, 791, 060 1, 986, 974 1, 844 1, 933, 982 2, 343, 967 1, 747, 913 2, 129, 654 2, 362, 380 2, 266, 044 2, 389, 764 3, 210, 468
(9) Deregulation in fee-charging private placement businesses • Employment Security Law revised in 1999. • General prohibition on private placement businesses was abolished. • Upper limit on the placement fees deregulated. • 388, 000 placement cases in 2006 (341, 000 for fee-charging, 48, 000 for non profit).
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