• Latest
  • Trending
  • All
  • News
  • Business
  • Politics
  • Science
  • World
  • Lifestyle
  • Tech
Japan’s Labor Market Has a Lesson for the Fed: Women Can Surprise You

Japan’s Labor Market Has a Lesson for the Fed: Women Can Surprise You

March 20, 2024
What the ‘Small Nodule’ Found on Biden’s Prostate Could Mean for a Man’s Health

What the ‘Small Nodule’ Found on Biden’s Prostate Could Mean for a Man’s Health

May 14, 2025
College Professors Are Using ChatGPT. Some Students Aren’t Happy.

College Professors Are Using ChatGPT. Some Students Aren’t Happy.

May 14, 2025
Trump Arrives in Qatar After Meeting Syrian President in Saudi Arabia: Live Updates

Trump Arrives in Qatar After Meeting Syrian President in Saudi Arabia: Live Updates

May 14, 2025
Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs Trial Live Updates: Cassie Testifies About Hotel Assault in 2016

Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs Trial Live Updates: Cassie Testifies About Hotel Assault in 2016

May 14, 2025
The World Is Wooing U.S. Researchers Shunned by Trump

The World Is Wooing U.S. Researchers Shunned by Trump

May 14, 2025
No Naked Dressing at Cannes Film Festival? How Will Stars Make News?

No Naked Dressing at Cannes Film Festival? How Will Stars Make News?

May 14, 2025
What to Know About Trump’s Latest Changes to Taxes on Small Packages From China

What to Know About Trump’s Latest Changes to Taxes on Small Packages From China

May 14, 2025
Republicans’ Planned Medicaid Cuts Draw Protests at House Hearing

Republicans’ Planned Medicaid Cuts Draw Protests at House Hearing

May 14, 2025
An L.A. Doctor’s House Burned. Now He Treats the Fires’ Effects in Neighbors.

An L.A. Doctor’s House Burned. Now He Treats the Fires’ Effects in Neighbors.

May 13, 2025
Tesla Board Chair Robyn Denholm Made $198 Million Selling Stock as Profit Fell

Tesla Board Chair Robyn Denholm Made $198 Million Selling Stock as Profit Fell

May 13, 2025
President Trump Gets Lavish Welcome in Saudi Arabia for Middle East Visit: Live Updates

President Trump Gets Lavish Welcome in Saudi Arabia for Middle East Visit: Live Updates

May 13, 2025
In Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs’s Trial, CassieIs the Star Witness

In Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs’s Trial, CassieIs the Star Witness

May 13, 2025
Real Bulletin
  • News
    • All
    • Business
    • Politics
    • World
    Trump Arrives in Qatar After Meeting Syrian President in Saudi Arabia: Live Updates

    Trump Arrives in Qatar After Meeting Syrian President in Saudi Arabia: Live Updates

    What to Know About Trump’s Latest Changes to Taxes on Small Packages From China

    What to Know About Trump’s Latest Changes to Taxes on Small Packages From China

    Republicans’ Planned Medicaid Cuts Draw Protests at House Hearing

    Republicans’ Planned Medicaid Cuts Draw Protests at House Hearing

    President Trump Gets Lavish Welcome in Saudi Arabia for Middle East Visit: Live Updates

    President Trump Gets Lavish Welcome in Saudi Arabia for Middle East Visit: Live Updates

    German Companies Grow Wary of Investing in the U.S.

    German Companies Grow Wary of Investing in the U.S.

    Trump’s No. 1 Fan in Greenland: A Bricklayer Turned Political Player

    Trump’s No. 1 Fan in Greenland: A Bricklayer Turned Political Player

    U.S. and China Reach Deal to Temporarily Slash Tariffs

    U.S. and China Reach Deal to Temporarily Slash Tariffs

    Trump Heads to the Middle East Focused on Business Deals, Not Diplomacy

    Trump Heads to the Middle East Focused on Business Deals, Not Diplomacy

    As Cease-Fire Seems to Hold, India and Pakistan Both Claim Victory

    As Cease-Fire Seems to Hold, India and Pakistan Both Claim Victory

    U.S. and China Meet for Second Day of Trade Talks

    U.S. and China Meet for Second Day of Trade Talks

    Trending Tags

    • Donald Trump
    • Future of News
    • Climate Change
    • Market Stories
    • Election Results
    • Flat Earth
    • Business
    • Politics
  • Health
  • Tech
    • All
    • Apps
    • Gadget
    • Gear
    • Mobile
    • Startup
    College Professors Are Using ChatGPT. Some Students Aren’t Happy.

    College Professors Are Using ChatGPT. Some Students Aren’t Happy.

    Tesla Board Chair Robyn Denholm Made $198 Million Selling Stock as Profit Fell

    Tesla Board Chair Robyn Denholm Made $198 Million Selling Stock as Profit Fell

    ‘The Interview’: Can Whitney Wolfe Herd Make Us Love Dating Apps Again?

    ‘The Interview’: Can Whitney Wolfe Herd Make Us Love Dating Apps Again?

    The Tech Guys Are Fighting. Literally.

    The Tech Guys Are Fighting. Literally.

    Teenager Fatally Shot During ‘Ding Dong Ditch’ TikTok Prank

    Teenager Fatally Shot During ‘Ding Dong Ditch’ TikTok Prank

    The 2006 Zuckerberg Quote at the Center of Meta’s Antitrust Trial

    The 2006 Zuckerberg Quote at the Center of Meta’s Antitrust Trial

    How to Use A.I.-Powered Writing Tools on Your iPhone and Android

    How to Use A.I.-Powered Writing Tools on Your iPhone and Android

    OpenAI Backtracks on Plans to Drop Nonprofit Control

    OpenAI Backtracks on Plans to Drop Nonprofit Control

    What’s Behind Technology’s Disembodied Female Voices?

    What’s Behind Technology’s Disembodied Female Voices?

    Voters Approve Incorporation of SpaceX Hub as Starbase, Texas

    Voters Approve Incorporation of SpaceX Hub as Starbase, Texas

    Trending Tags

    • Flat Earth
    • Sillicon Valley
    • Mr. Robot
    • MotoGP 2017
    • Golden Globes
    • Future of News
  • Economy
  • Lifestyle
    • All
    • Travel
    No Naked Dressing at Cannes Film Festival? How Will Stars Make News?

    No Naked Dressing at Cannes Film Festival? How Will Stars Make News?

    Kim Kardashian Testifies in Paris Robbery Trial Decked Out in Diamonds

    Kim Kardashian Testifies in Paris Robbery Trial Decked Out in Diamonds

    Bill Belichick’s Girlfriend Jordon Hudson Competes in Miss Maine USA Pageant

    Bill Belichick’s Girlfriend Jordon Hudson Competes in Miss Maine USA Pageant

    Abel Tesfaye Bids Farewell to The Weeknd in ‘Hurry Up Tomorrow’ Film

    Abel Tesfaye Bids Farewell to The Weeknd in ‘Hurry Up Tomorrow’ Film

    George Lee, Trailblazing Chinese Ballet Dancer, Dies at 90

    George Lee, Trailblazing Chinese Ballet Dancer, Dies at 90

    A Guide to Bravo’s New Shows, Including “Wife Swap: The Real Housewives Edition”

    A Guide to Bravo’s New Shows, Including “Wife Swap: The Real Housewives Edition”

    Is It Wrong to Date My Friend’s Ex?

    Is It Wrong to Date My Friend’s Ex?

    What to Know about ‘Love Island USA’ Season 7

    What to Know about ‘Love Island USA’ Season 7

    Andre 3000’s Met Gala Piano Was Both a Fashion Statement and an Album Teaser

    Andre 3000’s Met Gala Piano Was Both a Fashion Statement and an Album Teaser

    Inside the Most Politically Charged Met Gala in Years

    Inside the Most Politically Charged Met Gala in Years

    Trending Tags

    • Golden Globes
    • Mr. Robot
    • MotoGP 2017
    • Climate Change
    • Flat Earth
    • Arts
  • Sports
No Result
View All Result
Real Bulletin
No Result
View All Result
Home Economy

Japan’s Labor Market Has a Lesson for the Fed: Women Can Surprise You

by editor
March 20, 2024
in Economy
0
Japan’s Labor Market Has a Lesson for the Fed: Women Can Surprise You
491
SHARES
1.4k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


Japan’s economy has rocketed into the headlines this year as inflation returns for the first time in decades, workers win wage gains and the Bank of Japan raises interest rates for the first time in 17 years.

But there’s another, longer-running trend happening in the Japanese economy that could prove interesting for American policymakers: Female employment has been steadily rising.

Working-age Japanese women have been joining the labor market for years, a trend that has continued strongly in recent months as a tight labor market prods companies to work to attract new employees.

The jump in female participation has happened partly by design. Since about 2013, the Japanese government has tried to make both public policies and corporate culture more friendly to women in the work force. The goal was to attract a new source of talent at a time when the world’s fourth-largest economy faces an aging and shrinking labor market.

“Where Japan did well over the recent decade is putting the care infrastructure in place for working parents,” Nobuko Kobayashi, a partner at EY-Parthenon in Japan, wrote in an email.

Still, even some who were around when the “womenomics” policies were designed have been caught off guard by just how many Japanese women are now choosing to work thanks to the policy changes and to shifting social norms.

“We all underestimated it,” said Adam Posen, the president of the Peterson Institute for International Economics, who advised the Japanese government while it was instituting the policies meant to bring on more female workers. Mr. Posen thought at the time that they might be able to get perhaps 800,000 women into the labor market, far fewer than the roughly three million who have actually joined (albeit many of them are part time).

It’s a surprise that could serve as an important reminder to economic officials around the world. Economists often try to guess how much a nation’s labor force can expand by extrapolating from history — and they tend to assume that there are limits to how many people can be lured into the labor market, since some are likely to stay home as caretakers or for other reasons.

But history has served as a poor guide in Japan over the past decade as social standards, marriage rates and fertility rates have shifted. And the lesson provided by the Japanese experience is simple: Women may be a bigger potential labor force than economists typically count on.

“Clearly, women in Japan wanted to work,” Mr. Posen said. “It raises questions about what is a reasonable expectation for female labor force participation.”

That message could be a relevant one for the United States’ central bank, the Federal Reserve.

How much room the U.S. labor market has to expand is a key question for the Fed in 2024. Over the past year, inflation has come down in the United States and wage pressures have moderated even as hiring has stayed strong and the economy has expanded rapidly. That positive outcome has been possible because the nation’s supply of workers has been expanding.

Labor force growth has come from two big sources in recent years: Immigration has picked up, and labor force participation has been recovering after falling during the pandemic. That is especially true for women in their prime working years, between the ages of 25 to 54, who have been participating in the job market at record or near-record rates.

Now, economists are asking whether the expansion can continue. Immigration into the United States does appear to be poised to persist: Economists at Goldman Sachs said the United States could add about one million more immigrants than normal this year. The question is whether participation will continue to pick up.

For the moment, it appears to be leveling off on an overall basis over the past year or so. Given that the population is aging, and older people work less, many economists say the overall number could stay steady and even fall over time. Given those trends, some economists doubt that the improvement in labor supply can continue.

“Further rebalancing of the labor market will need to come from slower growth in labor demand rather than continued rapid growth in worker supply,” one analysis from the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco concluded this year.

But in the late 2010s, economists also thought that the American labor market had little room to add new workers — only to find themselves surprised as people kept coming back from the sidelines.

And while female prime-age working rates have held fairly steady since last summer, the Japanese experience raises the question: Could American women in particular end up working in bigger numbers?

The United States once had higher female labor force participation for working-age women than other advanced economies, but it has now been surpassed by many, including Japan as of 2015.

These days, about 77 percent of prime-age women in the United States have a job or are looking for one. That number is about 83 percent for Japanese women, up from about 74 percent a decade ago and about 65 percent in the early 1990s. Japanese women now work in shares that are about on a par with Australia, although some nations like Canada still have higher working-age female labor force participation.

Those changes came about for several reasons. The Japanese government made some important policy moves, for one thing, such as increasing child care center capacity.

The nation’s changing attitudes toward family also played a role in freeing up women for work. The average age of people marrying for the first time has been steadily rising, and fertility rates are at record lows.

“Delaying marriage, delaying childbearing years, not getting married at all — that’s the big societal backdrop,” said Paul Sheard, an economist who has long been focused on the nation.

But there have been limits. There is still a tax penalty for second earners in the nation, and the quality of jobs women hold is not great. They are often lower-paid and for limited hours. Women are also largely absent from leadership ranks in Japanese companies.

Kathy Matsui, the former vice chair of Goldman Sachs Group’s Japan unit and the woman who spearheaded womenomics as an idea, has said the effort needs continued work.

Still, Japan’s experience could offer hints at what lies ahead in the United States. Fertility and marriage rates are also down in America, for instance, which could create space for working rates among young and middle-aged women to keep rising in the near term, although it does plant the seeds for a smaller population and economy down the road. Remote or hybrid work arrangements could also make it easier for caretakers to work.

And some of the more family-friendly policies that Japan has used could be a model for the United States, experts said.

Ms. Kobayashi at EY-Parthenon noted that children on the nursery center waiting lists decreased to 2,680 this year from 19,900 five years earlier.

But Japan could learn from the United States’ more flexible work culture, said Wendy Cutler, vice president at the Asia Society Policy Institute. That allows women to avoid dropping out of the job market and disrupting their career paths when they do have children.

“Looking at the quality of these jobs is going to be more and more important,” Ms. Cutler said.


Source: nytimes.com

Share196Tweet123Share49
editor

editor

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Maine Coon kitten is so huge individuals mistake it for a canine

Maine Coon kitten is so huge individuals mistake it for a canine

January 20, 2022
Fury as partying council boss Kate Josephs clings on to £190k job

Fury as partying council boss Kate Josephs clings on to £190k job

January 20, 2022
Rihanna showcases rising child bump

Rihanna showcases rising child bump

February 14, 2022
What the ‘Small Nodule’ Found on Biden’s Prostate Could Mean for a Man’s Health

What the ‘Small Nodule’ Found on Biden’s Prostate Could Mean for a Man’s Health

0

With 150 million daily active users, Instagram Stories is launching ads

0

Washington prepares for Donald Trump’s big moment

0
What the ‘Small Nodule’ Found on Biden’s Prostate Could Mean for a Man’s Health

What the ‘Small Nodule’ Found on Biden’s Prostate Could Mean for a Man’s Health

May 14, 2025
College Professors Are Using ChatGPT. Some Students Aren’t Happy.

College Professors Are Using ChatGPT. Some Students Aren’t Happy.

May 14, 2025
Trump Arrives in Qatar After Meeting Syrian President in Saudi Arabia: Live Updates

Trump Arrives in Qatar After Meeting Syrian President in Saudi Arabia: Live Updates

May 14, 2025
Real Bulletin

Copyright © 2024

Navigate Site

  • About Us

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Business
  • Health
  • Tech
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Economy
  • Lifestyle
    • Arts

Copyright © 2024

Are you sure want to unlock this post?
Unlock left : 0
Are you sure want to cancel subscription?