HOME > NATION > Article

Text Size

small

medium

large


Japan Firms Reviving Voluntary Retirement Programs

Japan Firms Reviving Voluntary Retirement Programs

   Tokyo, Nov. 19 (Jiji Press)--Japanese companies are increasingly asking their employees to quit voluntarily to reduce labor costs as part of their business restructuring efforts, Tokyo Shoko Research Ltd. said Tuesday.
   As of Friday, 9,219 workers at 53 publicly traded companies had applied for their firms' voluntary retirement programs this year, according to the private credit research firm.
   The number of applicants jumped threefold from a year earlier to far exceed the annual figure of 3,161 for 2023 and that of retirement-soliciting firms grew 1.5-fold.
   Tokyo Shoko Research then predicted that the 2024 total will exceed 10,000 to hit the highest level since 2021, when 15,892 workers, mainly at service-sector companies such as travel agencies and retailers, applied for such programs amid the COVID crisis.
   Toward year-end, some other major companies will offer large-scale programs, it pointed out.

To read a full story, please click here to find out how to subscribe.

NATION

HEADLINES

POLITICS
Japan Diet to Be Convened into 24-Day Extra Session on Nov. 28
ECONOMY
Indian Visitors to Japan Increase 29.1% to Record 21,700 in Oct.
SPORTS
MLB: Tigers' Tarik Skubal, Braves' Chris Sale Named Cy Young Award Winners
OTHER
9-Dan Shogi Player Hifumi Kato Listed in Guinness World Records over Tsume Shogi

AFP-JIJI PRESS NEWS JOURNAL


Photos