Friday, November 22, 2024

Japan wants Indian tech workers

  • Low wages, conservative language and cultural barriers, however, make Japan less attractive to many.
  • Rigid corporate structures can discourage newcomers

Japanese companies are trying to attract highly educated Indians to fill the huge shortage of IT engineers, reported globeecho.com.

However, there are challenges. The report pointed out that recruiters have said it was a critical test of Japan’s ability to compete with the United States and Europe for increasingly sought-after global talent. Low wages and conservative language and cultural barriers make Japan less attractive to many. Rigid corporate structures can discourage newcomers. Japan, long ambivalent about the presence of foreigners, lacks a solid system for integrating them into Japanese life.

With its citizens aging rapidly, Japan desperately needs more workers to fuel the world’s third-largest economy, filling gaps in everything from farming and factory work to elderly care and nursing. In line with this reality, the country has eased strict immigration restrictions, hoping to attract hundreds of thousands of foreign workers, notably through the historic changes to work visa rules adopted in 2018.

  • “Most Indian IT workers arrive in Japan without much knowledge of the language or culture.”
  • “This can hinder their careers while their peers are making strides in India, the US or Europe.”
  • “They soon start exploring their options, and they often end up moving elsewhere. In the United States, median salaries for technology workers are, by some estimates, more than double those in Japan.”

— Megha Wadhwa, Migration researcher and expert on Japanese and South Asian studies at the Free University of Berlin

PRAVASISAMWAD.COM

The need for international talent is high in the tech sector, with the government estimating the worker shortage will reach nearly 800,000 in the coming years, as the country pursues its long-awaited national digitization effort.

Japanese companies, especially small ones, have struggled to wean themselves off paperwork and adopt digital tools. Government reports show that Japanese companies’ adoption of cloud technologies lags nearly a decade behind their US counterparts.

Worker shortage will reach nearly 800,000 in the coming years

“Most Indian IT workers arrive in Japan without much knowledge of the language or culture,” said Megha Wadhwa, a migration researcher and expert on Japanese and South Asian studies at the Free University of Berlin and author of the 2021 book “Indian Migrants in Tokyo.” This can hinder their careers while their peers are making strides in India, the US or Europe.” “They soon start exploring their options, and they often end up moving elsewhere. In the United States, median salaries for technology workers are, by some estimates, more than double those in Japan.

*********************************************************************

Readers

These are extraordinary times. All of us have to rely on high-impact, trustworthy journalism. And this is especially true of the Indian Diaspora. Members of the Indian community overseas cannot be fed with inaccurate news.

Pravasi Samwad is a venture that has no shareholders. It is the result of an impassioned initiative of a handful of Indian journalists spread around the world.  We have taken the small step forward with the pledge to provide news with accuracy, free from political and commercial influence. Our aim is to keep you, our readers, informed about developments at ‘home’ and across the world that affect you.

 

Please help us to keep our journalism independent and free.

In these difficult times, to run a news website requires finances. While every contribution, big or small, will makes a difference, we request our readers to put us in touch with advertisers worldwide. It will be a great help.

For more information: pravasisamwad00@gmail.com

Related Articles

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

- Advertisement -

EDITOR'S CHOICE