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posted by n1 on Tuesday May 23 2017, @03:45AM   Printer-friendly
from the lack-of-future-taxpayers dept.

Onuki, a 31-year-old salesman, is headed to the train station to catch the 12:24 a.m. train, the last one of the night, back to his home in Yokohama. The train will quickly fill up with other professional working men.

At about 1:30 a.m., after having made a pit stop at a convenience store to grab a sandwich, Onuki arrives home. When he opens the bedroom door, he accidentally wakes his wife, Yoshiko, who just recently fell asleep after working an 11-hour day. She chides him for making too much noise and he apologizes.

Then, with his food still digesting and his alarm set for 7 a.m., he creeps into bed, ready to do it all again tomorrow.

Over the past two decades, stories like the Onukis' have become commonplace in Japan. Young couples are fighting to make relationships work amid a traditional work culture that expects men to be breadwinners and women to be homemakers. It's a losing battle. Many newlyweds are forced to watch their free time disappear, surrendering everything from the occasional date night to starting a family.

The daily constraints have made for a worrisome trend. Japan has entered a vicious cycle of low fertility and low spending that has led to trillions in lost GDP and a population decline of 1 million people, all within just the past five years. If left unabated, experts forecast severe economic downturn and a breakdown in the fabric of social life.

"Adult diapers have outsold baby diapers in Japan for the last six years."


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  • (Score: 3, Informative) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday May 23 2017, @05:34AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday May 23 2017, @05:34AM (#513998)

    This workaholism, what is the point of it? They in a terrible hurry, racing to get ahead of the rest of the world?

    There's no point, and it's almost certainly more destructive than productive. The Japanese even have a word, Karōshi [wikipedia.org], meaning (quite literally) "working to death".

    The problem is really cultural. If you go home before your coworkers do, you must not be as dedicated to your company as they are. If you don't go out drinking with your coworkers after work, you must not like them very much. This attitude is so ingrained that even if you tell your workers to go home and relax they probably won't.

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