Virus breaks the mold for telework in office-bound Japan

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The longstanding stereotype of Japan's office-bound 'salaryman' is being tested as companies cautiously embrace working from home in a bid to stem ...

TOKYO: The longstanding stereotype of Japan's office-bound"salaryman" is being tested as companies cautiously embrace working from home in a bid to stem the spread of the coronavirus.

Polls show"the Japanese still have this image that telework isn't real work because you're not physically in the office," said Haruka Kazama, an economist at the Mizuho research institute. "This experience has completely changed my image of teleworking," he told AFP in the small office he has set up in the family home he shares with his wife and two children.

Sato's wife Hitomi takes primary care of their daughters, six-year-old Yurina and four-year-old Hidano and said she has welcomed the helping hand at home.The Japanese government has renewed its push for teleworking and off-peak commuting in recent years, hoping to ease the burden on the notoriously congested Tokyo public transport system, particularly ahead of the Olympics.

A poll carried out at the end of February by the Keidanren business association of nearly 400 major firms found nearly 70 per cent had already begun implementing teleworking or were planning to because of the pandemic.

 

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