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Labor Policy

Labor Policy. Keiichiro HAMAGUCHI. Chapter 4. Gender Policy. Section 2. Reconciliation of Professional and Family Life. (1) Child Care Leave and Family Care Leave. (a) Child Care Leave. 1972 Working Women’s Welfare Law provided child care leave for only women as an endeavor obligation.

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Labor Policy

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  1. Labor Policy Keiichiro HAMAGUCHI

  2. Chapter 4 Gender Policy

  3. Section 2 Reconciliation of Professional and Family Life

  4. (1) Child Care Leave and Family Care Leave

  5. (a) Child Care Leave • 1972 Working Women’s Welfare Law provided child care leave for only women as an endeavor obligation. • 1985 Equal Employment Opportunity Law maintained this gender bias. • Liberal Democratic Party initiated binding law but failed in 1980. • 1965 ILO Recommendation No.123 on Women with Family Responsibilities was not exception.

  6. 1981 ILO Convention No.156 on Equality for Workers with Family Responsibilities applied both sex. • Prime mover was a decline in birth rate of Japanese women (1.57 in 1989). • 1991 Child Care Leave Law established right to child care leave (up to 1 year old) for both sex excluding fixed-term workers. • 1994 Childcare Leave Benefits are paid to workers who take childcare leave under 1 (benefit rate: 25%, up to 40% in 2000).

  7. (b) Family Care Leave • 1995 revised Child Care and Family Care Leave Law established right to family care leave (up to 3 months). • Family care: taking care of a subject family member (spouse, parent, child, or parent of a spouse) in injury, sickness or disability. • 1998 Family Care Leave Benefits

  8. (c) Limitation on Overtime and Night-work • 1997 revised Labor Standards Law abolished protection for women. • Trade unions demanded protection from overtime and night work for both sex with family responsibility. • 1998 and 2001 revised CCFCLL provided exemption or limitation upon request (overtime limit: 24 hours per month, 150 hours per year). • ILO Convention No.171 on Night Work adopted in 1990

  9. (d) Recent Development • 2004 revised CCFCLL provided 5 days leave to take care of a sick child. • 2004 revised CCFCLL extended rights to child care and family care leave to certain types of fixed-term workers.

  10. (2) Part-time Work • Part-time workers increased in women because of reconciliation of work and life. • Opposition parties proposed ban on discrimination against part-timers. • 1993 Part-time workers Law had no provision on discrimination, only “considering the balance with regular workers.”

  11. 10 years to define “balance with regular workers”. • 2002 Study Group report recommended “balanced treatment” of pat-time workers. • 2003 Guidelines on part-time workers provided “balanced treatment” principle. • 1994 ILO Convention No.175 on Part-Time Work required same protection and wage for part-time workers as comparable full-time workers.

  12. Japanese “Paato-Taimaa” includes full-time workers called as “Paato”. • 2007 revised Part-Time Work Law prohibited discrimination against part-timers equivalent to ordinary workers. • Very few part-timers meet the requirement. • On other types of part-timers, employers are required to only endeavor to consider the balance with ordinary workers.

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