Karoshi, literally means "working to death." Sociology
Professor Scott North of the University of Osaka estimated that as many as
8,000 out of 30,000 suicides in Japan each year are work-related. On top of
this, he believes that at least 10,000 non-suicide deaths occur because
work-related exhaustion.
In Japan, long hours in the workplace are seen both as a
necessity and a reason for honour. In a bid to reduce work-related cases of
depression and suicide, the Japanese parliament is considering making it
compulsory for workers to take five days of paid leave a year.
As full-time jobs have declined in relation to part-time
positions over the last three decades, full-time workers have had to take on
more responsibilities, especially as job definitions and workflow can be vague.
Many workers fear resentment from their colleagues if they take days off,
resulting in 2013 in an average of only nine paid leave days taken out of an
18.5 entitlement each year. Another survey found that one in six workers took
no paid days at all. Accounts of men in their mid-40s working an average of 80
hours per week — and dying as a result of that — are not rare occurrences.
In 2011, a 22-year old English language instructor committed
suicide in Kanazawa, after complaining of unbearable out-of-office hours. An
investigation into her death estimated she was working 111 unpaid hours each month.
In an email to her father, she said that it was painful that she had to
continue her job even after she went home.
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