Abstract:
Foreign scholars in the international community show interest in Japanese labor
relations and the labor market mechanisms that govern these principles. The Japanese
employment system is distinct, unique and exclusive. Meanwhile, Japanese labor unions
defy the usual concept of the Western, antagonist-capitalist labor set-up. Japanese labor
organizations build a harmonious relationship between the company management and the
labor movement in order to maintain a stable Japanese economy without necessarily
sacrificing the welfare of the employees.
This paper is primarily concerned with the role and efficiency of Japanese labor
unions. It principally attempts to answer the questions: What is the role of workers' union
in the Japanese labor sector and how efficient are these organizations in addressing labor-related
issues? How do Japanese labor unions, such as Nissan Roren and JICHIRO,
maintain a harmonious relationship between the company administration and employees
in the Japanese labor market?
Further, this paper aims to assess the role of Japanese labor unions in using an
alternative approach as to their efficiency in promoting the welfare of the employees.
The study begins with the thesis statement: The set-up of the Japanese economy
defines the importance of the existence of Japanese labor unions, such as Nissan Roren
and JICHIRO, and their efficiency as they play vital roles in addressing labor-related
issues in the over-all Japanese labor market.
Through a survey of books, journals, brochures, transcripts of conventions and
conduct of interviews, this paper provides a discussion and analysis of the historical
evolution of Japanese labor movements, the mechanisms that underlie in Japanese
companies, the employment system and how these principles are manifested in and by
labor unions.
Two Japanese labor organizations, Nissan and JICHIRO, were considered as case
studies to validate the claim in the thesis statement. The writer's stay in Japan as an
exchange scholar at the University of Tokyo enabled him to interview members of Nissan
Roren and JICHIRO. The writer experienced first-hand Japanese culture that have a
bearing on Japanese labor unions.