erlog Wrote:The average hours worked per week in the UK is 43. I never said your situation wasn't the norm for investment banking. I said it wasn't the norm as far as working in the UK goes.
Yeah, my point is that there is no useful 'norm'. In the UK the working environment ranges from people on zero-hours contracts who are tied exclusively to one employer but only get to work (and to receive statutory benefits) at the whim of that employer; through salaried professionals who usually have a clause in their contract that states they have to work whatever additional hours as are necessary; to jobs in industries like investment banking, game development, law, movie-making, etc. where all rules go out the window. This is similar in Japan.
Quote:Wow, they made sure people only worked 12-13 hours a day instead of 16? Such progress!
You seem to be moving the goalposts now. Seriously, how many videogame companies do you know where people *don't* work 12 hour days? They certainly exist, but they are certainly not the norm - and usually, like I said upthread, those western companies where people get to go home, they are still expected to be on call at the end of a blackberry or smartphone. This is not ideal by any stretch of the imagination, but long hours in certain industries are not unique to Japan, and there are 9 to 5 jobs in Japan too - have you not seen the trains at 5pm?
Quote:I meant with regard to working conditions. Also, 建前 and 本音 are well-established cultural concepts when discussing Japan. Japanese society often makes use of 建前 in order to keep up appearances that social problems are being solved while actually solving nothing. This is by design. Old Japanese male politicians often do not want to actually fix issues with regard to working conditions, women's rights, rights of foreigners, etc.
I think this is a whole other discussion and it looks like you and I have disagreed with each other before about this. I happen to think that this concept is, again, not unique to Japan, and is frequently used by unhappy gaijin to frame unpleasant opinions about Japan and the Japanese.
Quote:Quote:Any one of those employees was free to take the matter up in a court of law if they were unhappy.
Good luck getting hired after that, and have fun with paying for lawyers.
Well it rarely reaches a court of law and settlements frequently include employers arranging the paperwork so it does not look like the employee was fired. In the event it does reach a court of law, then yes, it can cause problems subsequently, as it would in the UK if you seek legal redress (though in the UK the threshold for legal redress is usually more demanding - like I say, the qualifying period for unfair dismissal has recently been extended for example).
Quote:They may get those public holidays off, but Saturday is often a work day.
I know of no regular Japanese companies where Saturday is a work day, and if employees do work on Saturdays then the company is required (by law, I think) to issue them with replacement paid leave or pay.
Quote:I think Japan has a problematic work culture. I enjoy many aspects of living in Japan, but the working conditions are not one of them.
By that same token, you have made it clear you like working 12+ hours a day. I wonder how useful readers of this thread will find your perspective on this issue.
I think you must be trolling here: I mention *explicitly* that I don't *like* working at all. I have been pretty clear, though, that I am willing to suffer the drawbacks of working life in Japan in order to benefit from the many benefits of living (and working!) here. If I were to go back to the UK I would make a similar decision about the drawbacks of working life vs. the quality of life over there, but at the moment Japan comes out a clear winner.
Quote:Quote:Working in Japan is no better or worse than working anywhere else; it just has a different set of merits and drawbacks.
This is simply not true, and it's well-documented. The working conditions in Japan are worse than many other developed countries. This is a country that coined a new word to describe people literally working themselves to death.
Well-documented as in the sources that you cited above? A borderline crazy-japan piece and a survey conducted by a travel company? Again, just because the Japanese have a word for it, it doesn't mean it doesn't exist elsewhere.
(An interesting read about working life in Britain, incidentally, is here:
http://www.theguardian.com/books/2015/ap...ggs-review )
Quote:I'm sure compared to working in investment banking hell in the UK Japan is certainly better. Most people aren't coming from those kinds of working conditions, though. They might even find your current working conditions pretty terrible.
I'm sure compared to working in investment banking hell in the UK, working in investment banking hell in Japan is pretty similar actually, but I wouldn't know precisely for sure because I have done one and not the other. I have, though, worked for a whole range of different companies and industries across several countries, and really, my experiences in Japan are not uniformly better or worse; they are just better and worse in different ways. I think that is a pretty useful insight to share with the original poster.
EDIT: Since I think we have both probably made ourselves clear by now, I am not sure there is any point in continuing this discussion, so I thought I would just add a final word from my side to clarify: I think we both agree that Japan has a problematic work culture, as you point out. I think where we disagree is that you seem to consider Japan to be unique in this. I don't. I think the whole world has a problematic work culture right now, unfortunately.
Edited: 2015-05-13, 3:14 am