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Jobs scarce but leaders are upbeat
By F. J. Khergamvala
TOKYO, MAY 1. Japan's unemployment rate remained at its record
high for March but the top political leaders are putting a
positive spin on it as they decide on the best time to hold
elections.
The Management and Coordination Agency announced that the monthly
jobless rate for men had risen by 0.1 per cent to a record 5.2
per cent and the unemployment rate for women had also climbed by
0.1 per cent to 4.6 per cent. Releasing its seasonally adjusted
figures for March, the agency said the country posted an overall
unemployment post-War high record of 4.9 per cent for the second
consecutive month. For the whole fiscal year ending March 31, the
jobless rate stood at 4.7 per cent, the highest since present
data compilation methods were begun in 1953.
A top executive of the large Sogo department stores chain
committed suicide by hanging last week after he had failed to
persuade creditors to forgive about $ 6 billions in debt owed to
Sogo's creditor banks. Rising unemployment, such as resulting
from corporate failures and restructuring have been a big
contributory factor in the increase in number of suicides over
the past two years.
Politicians, however, see upcoming national elections and the
Prime Minister, Mr. Yoshiro Mori, saw ``signs of improvement''
(in the economy) in the figures. His deputy, Mr. Mikio Aoki, said
the figures do not reflect ``the favourable effects of economic
recovery.'' But Ministers handling the economic portfolios
cautioned against further worsening of the unemployment rate. Mr.
Kiichi Miyazawa, the elder statesman and Finance Minister who had
long foreseen unemployment as a natural consequence of
restructuring, said fresh job creation measures were essential
because the jobless rate could go up to five per cent or more.
The Economic Planning Agency chief, Mr. Taiichi Sakaiya, also
said he expected the situation to worsen before it got better.
In this era of the new economy, the figures do not appropriately
reflect reality. This compounds the error factor built into the
statistics because of hidden elements. Japan has never shown
figures of those graduates who do not find employment or of those
others not registered at employment exchanges.
The statistics also count among the employed those who work for
short limited hours, such as retired people. An imponderable that
should partly balance this statistical distortion is the fact
that tens of thousands, especially women, are finding their niche
in the information technology sector (IT), where a company often
means an individual not registered as part of the work force.
Thus, for instance, the number of unemployed in March rose by
220,000 over February, to 3.49 million people but the IT sector
probably accounted for a big chunk of the growth in new job
offers by 9.8 per cent in March over the previous year.
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