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Hserv 482 Session 9 Japan. United Nations Human Development Report 2007.

Dec 21, 2015

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Page 1: Hserv 482 Session 9 Japan. United Nations Human Development Report 2007.

Hserv 482 Session 9

Japan

Page 2: Hserv 482 Session 9 Japan. United Nations Human Development Report 2007.
Page 3: Hserv 482 Session 9 Japan. United Nations Human Development Report 2007.

United Nations Human Development Report 2007

77

78

79

80

81

82

83

JapanIceland

SwitzerlandAustralia

SpainSwedenCanada

IsraelItalyFrance

New Zealand

NorwayAustriaSingapore

NetherlandsGermany

MaltaCyprus

United Kingdom

FinlandGreeceBelgiumCosta Rica

Ireland

Luxembourg

United Arab Emirates

Chile

DenmarkKorea

United States

Life Expectancy (years)

510

1520

25

30

HEALTH OLYMPICS 2005

Page 4: Hserv 482 Session 9 Japan. United Nations Human Development Report 2007.

Yanagishita & Guralnik 1998

Page 5: Hserv 482 Session 9 Japan. United Nations Human Development Report 2007.

% P

opul

atio

n

Murray 2001

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Mu

nn

ell 2

004

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Mu

nn

ell 2

004

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Nakaji

Smoking Prevalence Rich Countries

Page 11: Hserv 482 Session 9 Japan. United Nations Human Development Report 2007.
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Demilitarization, DecentralizationDemocratization

Abolish the military "the Japanese people forever renounce war as a sovereign right of the nation and the threat or use of force as a means of settling international disputes”

Free universal education,

Right of workers to organize and bargain collectively

Right of everyone "to maintain the minimum standards of wholesome and cultured living."

Break up corporate conglomerates (zaibatsu)

Land reform jinushi (landlords) kosakumin (tenants)

Page 16: Hserv 482 Session 9 Japan. United Nations Human Development Report 2007.

Democratization (Revise constitution )Feature a peace clause

– "the Japanese people forever renounce war as a sovereign right of the nation and the threat or use of force as a means of settling international disputes”

Academic freedom, Free universal education, Right of workers to organize and bargain collectivelyRight of everyone "to maintain the minimum standards of wholesome

and cultured living."

Page 17: Hserv 482 Session 9 Japan. United Nations Human Development Report 2007.

Decentralization

Break up corporate conglomerates (zaibatsu)– "concentration of economic control enabled the zaibatsu

to continue a semi-feudal relationship between themselves and their employees, suppress wages, and hinder the development of independent political ideologies. Thus the formation of the middle class, which was useful in opposing the militarist group in other democratic countries, was retarded.” (US mission)

Land reform jinushi (landlords) kosakumin (tenants)

Page 18: Hserv 482 Session 9 Japan. United Nations Human Development Report 2007.

MacArthur MedicineAcademic freedom,

Free universal education,

Right of workers to organize and bargain collectively

Maximum Wage (65,000 yen in 1947 ~ $4333)

Decentralization including breaking up zaibatsu

and land reform (father had advocated in Philippines)

"Controlled revolution"

Page 19: Hserv 482 Session 9 Japan. United Nations Human Development Report 2007.
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Cultural InfluencesNorth America East Asia

INTERDEPENDENT SELF Texts: "Confucious, TaoNarratives: story of benevolence, diligenceMoral imperatives: compassion of Buddha, modesty

INDEPENDENCE OF SELF make CHOICES

Texts: "declaration of

independence-"all created equal"

Narratives: story of Mayflower

Moral imperatives: "God helps

those who help themselves"

Page 23: Hserv 482 Session 9 Japan. United Nations Human Development Report 2007.

和 wa In Japanese society acting untrue to one's inner beliefs is not only

accepted but is it's own moral virtue. The most important of all Japanese social values is "wa," or harmony. If achieving wa requires a bit of play-acting, then so be it. The Japanese distinguish between "honne"--one's true feelings--and "tatemae"--the face one wears in public. When your honne is at odds with the harmony of the group, a mature, virtuous person is expected to rise above his or her own selfish feelings and, for the welfare of the majority, put on a good face. To "stick up for what you stand for" is not a Japanese ideal. Most Japanese understand there's a difference between this public play-acting and reality, but nearly everyone is agreed upon its importance. In other words, what Americans may perceive as hypocritical, dishonest behavior is not only tolerated in Japan, but esteemed as good citizenship.

Robert Levine: Associate Dean, College of Science and Mathematics,

Professor of Psychology, California State University Fresno

Page 24: Hserv 482 Session 9 Japan. United Nations Human Development Report 2007.

和 wa Some of the subtleties might be lost by an American

reader. My understanding is that the tatemae is not "faking it" but more, adhering to an understood social code. The other person also understands the code, so the true feelings are not really the issue, but rather the choice the person is making to uphold the code and honor the group connection rather than the personal if they are in conflict. That choice in itself is a true personal statement. It's not "fake" if everyone knows the code.

Ann Glusker PH S/KC Japanese father, English mother

Page 25: Hserv 482 Session 9 Japan. United Nations Human Development Report 2007.

West-East ThoughtSocial Cognitive Systems

Page 26: Hserv 482 Session 9 Japan. United Nations Human Development Report 2007.

USA JapanAge 232 years 140 years

(or 2669 years)Health Olympics Ranking (2004) 30 1

1960 13 231950 top 5 <35th

Health Care system% of GNP spent on Health 16.2 7.1

% of world health bill ~50 11 (% world population) 4.6 2.1

Health Behaviorsmale smoking prevalence (%) 26.7 52.8

Smoking Attributable Deaths (1999)male aged 35-69 (%) 33 16

CEO-Boss/Average Worker Salary Gap (2003)531 to 1 10 to 1

Page 27: Hserv 482 Session 9 Japan. United Nations Human Development Report 2007.
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Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis, National Income and Product Accounts, Table 2.1, Personal Income and Its Disposition.

U . S . P e r s o n a l S a v i n g R a t e , 1 9 4 9 - 2 0 0 6

1 9 4 9 : 5 . 0 %

1 9 8 2 : 1 1 . 2 %

2 0 0 6 : - 1 . 1 %

- 2 %

0 %

2 %

4 %

6 %

8 %

1 0 %

1 2 %

1 9 4 9 1 9 5 4 1 9 5 9 1 9 6 4 1 9 6 9 1 9 7 4 1 9 7 9 1 9 8 4 1 9 8 9 1 9 9 4 1 9 9 9 2 0 0 4

Page 32: Hserv 482 Session 9 Japan. United Nations Human Development Report 2007.

Japan Wage Diff. Rank, Gender 90-04Wages (1000 yen)

1990 1995 2000 2004 90-04 % inc

General Mgr 573 628 636 633 10.5

Manager 459 512 517 515 12.3

Section Chief 346 386 401 389 12.3

No rank 20-24 174 198 204 203 16.6

General Mgr 522 531 575 585 12

Manager 361 404 437 429 18.7

Section Chief 290 332 344 346 19.3

No rank 20-24 157 183 191 192 22.2

Page 33: Hserv 482 Session 9 Japan. United Nations Human Development Report 2007.

Japanese unions and wages"Firms leveraged cooperative relations with workers

Unions organized at company level, so strong sense of purpose with management

Firms have preserved employment security in exchange for wage restraint

Firms have maintained sense of equity by restraining compensation for managers even more than for blue-collar and clerical workers so wages have varied inversely with rank"

Vogel (2006): Japan remodeled : how government and industry are reforming Japanese capitalism Cornell University Press

Page 34: Hserv 482 Session 9 Japan. United Nations Human Development Report 2007.

Pik

etty

200

6

Page 35: Hserv 482 Session 9 Japan. United Nations Human Development Report 2007.
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Japan: boss and managerresponse to economic downturn in the late 1990s

Page 37: Hserv 482 Session 9 Japan. United Nations Human Development Report 2007.

1 5 3 9 8 19

79 91

164172

0

50

100

150

200

Tax in $1,000

'$45K '$63K '$89K '$270K '$446K

Income levels in $1,000(K)

Comparion of tax burden on a married couple with two dependents by income levels between Japan and

U.S.A. in 2001Japanese Americans

Note: Tax includes federal, state and local income taxes.

Sources: Motohide Hashimoto from http://higashimi.ld.infoseek.co.jp/zeikokusaihikaku1.htm

Tax burden Namekata

Page 38: Hserv 482 Session 9 Japan. United Nations Human Development Report 2007.

Mea

n P

erce

nt C

orre

ctM

ean

Per

cent

Cor

rect

Percentile Rank of Father’s OccupationPercentile Rank of Father’s Occupation

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

1 11 22 26 38 42 53 69 71 81 91

JapanCanadara ce

dew ZealanThailandU.S.A.

92

Mean Score on Total BatterySecond International Mathematics Second International Mathematics

StudyStudy

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Health Olympics Age 80

Manton NEJM 1995

Whites

Willcox 2001

Page 41: Hserv 482 Session 9 Japan. United Nations Human Development Report 2007.

Health Olympics Age 80

Manton NEJM 1995

Whites

Page 42: Hserv 482 Session 9 Japan. United Nations Human Development Report 2007.

Health Olympics Age 80

Manton NEJM 1995

Whites

Willcox 2001

Page 43: Hserv 482 Session 9 Japan. United Nations Human Development Report 2007.

Life Expectancy for males

*USA

Page 44: Hserv 482 Session 9 Japan. United Nations Human Development Report 2007.

Life expectancy for females

*USA

Page 45: Hserv 482 Session 9 Japan. United Nations Human Development Report 2007.

12 month prevalence of DSM disordersAmericas Anxiety Mood Impulse-Control Substance Any Serious

United States 18.2 9.6 6.8 3.8 26.4 7.7Asia

Japan 5.3 3.1 1 1.7 8.8 1.5

JAMA June 4, 2004.

Page 46: Hserv 482 Session 9 Japan. United Nations Human Development Report 2007.

Depression in Japan (Inaba 2005)

US has more depression

US and Japanese women more depressed than men

Related to income in both countries

Not inversely related to level of education unlike US

US: education is route to increased income and status with complexity and autonomy linked to education

Japan: education gains entry to firms & occupations

advancement depends on size, status of company with age, seniority, family needs (married, dependents) determine promotions, earnings, (have strong in-house training in job skills, not education)

Page 47: Hserv 482 Session 9 Japan. United Nations Human Development Report 2007.

Japan Status: (Inaba 2005)

Japan a status inconsistent society (education, income, occupational prestige not closely tied to subjective class identification)

"nenko" system (upward mobility with seniority), in-house welfare services, corporate support for families (sweeper invites boss to child's b-day party)

National social programs (social security, pension plans, nursing insurance) act as safety nets for most citizens lessening vulnerability to stressful life experiences

Page 48: Hserv 482 Session 9 Japan. United Nations Human Development Report 2007.

Health Care & Public Health in JapanMedical School training

– No patient contact throughout entire period– Can go out and practice, never having touched a patient

Average doctor sees 75+ patients a day– No appointments (3 hour wait, 3 minute consultation)

Hospital stays– Very long (~ one month)– Must supply own cup for a drink, chopsticks for meals– Men shower on M, W, F, women the other days– Toilets down the hall, must supply soap, towel and shampoo

Appendectomies (more common than in US)– 60% of appendices removed were normal

Public health: 1000 measles deaths in 2002

Page 49: Hserv 482 Session 9 Japan. United Nations Human Development Report 2007.

PEACE CLAUSE US desired revision

Features a peace clause (Article 9)– "the Japanese people forever renounce war as a

sovereign right of the nation and the threat or use of force as a means of settling international disputes”

SINCE END OF COLD WAR, US trying to get Japan to revise Article 9 of constitution which bans military or waging war

"NEW JAPAN NATIONALISM, unilateral revision of Article 9 would isolate Japan from all of Asia" (Fukuyama 0704)

Page 50: Hserv 482 Session 9 Japan. United Nations Human Development Report 2007.

Health Olympics Age 80

Manton NEJM 1995

Whites