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雇用
- 集団就職
- 就職シーズン
- 新卒採用の仕組み
- 高卒採用の仕組み
- 日本の雇用制度
- 終身雇用
- 年功序列制度
- 賞与(ボーナス)制度
- 企業別組合
- 企業別組合の労使協調
- 失業保険
- 二分化された女性職:一般職と総合職
- 女性雇用者の増加
- 女性の多い職種
- 退職後の職位と社会保障
- 結婚退職・男女別定年
- 大企業と中小企業の関係
- パートタイムで働く女性たち
- 産業部門でみる日本の労働人口
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The number of workers in Japan has increased, but the rate of unionization in Japan has declined.
Photo from Mainichi Shimbun.
Enterprise Union Cooperation
The Dōmei labor federation promoted labor-management cooperation and workers’ participation in management. These unions believed that by working with management to increase productivity, both the company and the workers could prosper together. This view became predominant in Japanese enterprise unions during the high growth era of the 1960s and 1970s.
After the “Oil Shock” of 1973, workers in enterprise unions in large companies worked closely with management to make the production process more efficient, in exchange for long-term job security and good wages and benefits.
Increasingly, white collar workers and supervisors made up the unionized labor force in these companies. Traditional “blue-collar” or manual labor jobs were filled by non-unionized contract workers and workers in subcontracting firms. As a result, the percentage of workers in unions has decreased even though the total number of workers has remained fairly stable.
Click on CHARTS, below, for more about unionized companies in Japan.
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言葉の説明:
enterprise union
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Oil Shock
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job security
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contract
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