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Commentary / Japan
Why are Japanese teens so glum?
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Young people in Japan have the lowest mental well-being of 20 major countries, according to a study by the Varkey Foundation. | GETTY IMAGES
LONDON – Japanese teens are lagging behind many other countries in well-being and happiness. That is one of the conclusions of a new report on educational well-being recently published by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development — with the key finding that out of 35 OECD countries, only South Korean and Turkish teens rated their life satisfaction lower than Japanese young people.
Japanese teens were also above average on overall anxiety indicators and well below average for motivation to succeed in school. This finding, part of a survey of 540,000 15-year-olds in 72 countries, indicates a worrying pattern throughout the world: Advanced economies have lower levels of well-being than might be expected from their material prosperity and freedoms — particularly among young people.
The OECD’s report is just the latest in an emerging literature of global youth studies on this issue. Last year, the Varkey Foundation published the “Generation Z: Global Citizenship Survey” about the attitudes of young people aged 15 to 21 in 20 major countries.
Although the report found that young people globally had a largely internationalist and liberal outlook, it also showed that young people in Japan had the lowest mental well-being of all countries surveyed — particularly worrying given that the figures for 2014 gave suicide as the leading cause of death among Japan’s 10- to 19-year-olds.
Japanese young people were also found to have the lowest level of net happiness of all 20 countries polled, and more Japanese young people said they were unhappy (17 percent) than any other country apart from South Korea (also at 17 percent).
On any interpretation, these findings give cause for concern — prompting the urgent question of how the well-being of Japanese teens can be improved. It emerges that the picture is complex and the answers not obvious.
First, the findings of the OECD report show that the level of educational achievement, the amount of time children spend studying and the frequency of testing are all independent of well-being. In other words, none of these factors in themselves contribute to low well-being among children. Instead, the report suggests that it is the context in which education is facilitated and supported that is important.
One key finding is that students whose parents reported spending time talking to their child daily or eating a main meal with their child at the table were between 22 percent and 39 percent more likely to report high levels of life satisfaction. Victimization of bullying is also less frequently reported by students who said that they receive parental support when facing difficulties at school. In addition, students in schools with above-average levels of well-being reported much more support given by teachers than those in schools with below-average well-being.
Clearly, support in facing the challenging environment of school plays a significant role in well-being. But there are good reasons to think that additional factors are in play, and the Generation Z report throws light on the context of these OECD findings.
The report measured youth satisfaction on a wide range of metrics, including happiness with life, mental well-being and emotional well-being, and unexpectedly found that young people in four countries — China, India, Nigeria and Indonesia — placed consistently at or near the top of the satisfaction scale for all three areas.
Why? Three main factors were discovered. First, China, Indonesia and India also had the strongest family relationships — which raises the possibility that overall well-being may be a function of a child’s general relationship with family, rather than simply as it relates to school support.
Second, of all countries surveyed, only China, Indonesia, India and Nigeria thought overall that the world was not becoming a worse place. Related to this, it was also clear that the top countries for well-being tended to be emerging economies. It may be that perceived opportunities for expansion has a positive impact on well-being. Meanwhile, in advanced economies like Japan’s, there may be a dimly discernible sense that the economy has “peaked” and that there is little room to advance.
Closely connected clues to the reason for Japan’s low mental well-being are found in some of the other Japanese youth responses. Japanese teens reported that “working hard/helping myself get on in life” was their most important value — and more chose this than in any other country except South Korea (also low in the well-being stakes).
Japanese teens were also the least likely of all 20 countries to think that making a contribution to wider society was important. It is easy to see how these beliefs, in combination with a lack of opportunity, could produce a pessimistic state about one’s chances of leading a successful or meaningful life.
While we can do little as individuals to affect the state of the economy, it is possible to consider how our family relationships, the demands of our culture and education system, and our opportunities for rest, impact our well-being. Happiness may not be reducible to a list of prescriptive conditions, but there is considerable room for evidence-based policy to guide Japanese institutions in promoting well-being as much as possible, and seeking to cushion the impact of areas that remain outside their influence.
Vikas Pota is chief executive of the Varkey Foundation.
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Young single people in Japan aren’t having sex and the reason is proving fatal
Almost half of single young men and women in Japan are virgins. Up to 70 per cent of millennials aren’t in a relationship but their desire to marry one day remains. In a country where birth rates are crashing, the stats have been blamed on everything from anime to porn and women not pulling their weight. The Feed travelled to Japan to find out if there’s something else at play.
Watch the full documentary, Sex in Japan: Dying for Company
Toyko’s Akihabara area is an ‘otaku’ (geek) paradise filled with anime, manga and gaming stores.
It’s also the home of maid cafes and on a Sunday morning you can find young men hanging out, slouching against walls, waiting for them to open.
Inside, they’ll be fawned over and called ‘master’ by women dressed as cute, frilly (you guessed it) maids.
The name of the restaurant is a reference to the "ideal Japanese female" - a lady of tradition, of feminine grace and domesticity.
The woman who runs it, Yuki Chizui, has a good sense of humour.
“I can’t help being a strong woman,” the 31-year-old tells The Feed as she slices into raw fish.
The restaurant is a big deal in a country where women’s hands are considered too warm to make sushi and their menstrual cycles are said to ruin a woman’s sense of smell.
Her ambition to break down barriers for women in the workplace is not popular with potential suitors.
“I can find men, but the problem is I speak out a lot … That somehow puts them off.”
Yuki says that hasn’t always been the case in Japan and the change has a lot to do with men facing job insecurity and falling wages.
“To keep their dignity, men want someone weaker than themselves, thin and frail, soft and feminine like the maid cafe girls.”
Yuki is among around 60 per cent of young women aged 18-34 in Japan who are single. For men that figure is 70 per cent.
Many aren’t having sex either. In fact, around 44 per cent of unmarried women and 42 per cent of unmarried men admit they are virgins, according to The 2015 National Fertility Survey, which is a kind of sex and relationship census conducted by the government every five years.
The Government has a keen interest in the findings - Japan’s ageing population is shrinking.
In 2017, the number of births fell to its lowest since records began more than a century ago, resulting in the largest ever natural population decline of 403,000, a sizeable amount in a country of127 million.
Japan’s Liberal Democratic Party MP Kato Kanji earlier this year commented that women should have multiple children, implying single women are a burden on the state.
But the reason so many are flying solo is not a generation turning its back on marriage and family: more than 85 per cent of men and women intend to marry.
So what’s stopping people from getting hitched?
Twenty-six-year-old Taiyo Hashimoto says there are not enough hours in the day to date.
“I’m supposed to finish work at 7pm but I work overtime basically every day.”
Taiyo is what’s known in Japan as a ‘salaryman’, someone who works in an office.
He’s smart and dedicated to climbing the corporate ladder, which means putting the company first and often catching the last train home at midnight after drinking with his boss.
“I have to keep up with him, which is hard on me. He has a drink. So do I. He asks for another, so do I. That’s what you’re expected to do.”
Taiyo says another reason for Japan’s high rates of singleness could be Japan’s multibillion-dollar sex industry.
There are escorts, hostess bars, fetish clubs, masturbation clubs, love hotels and plenty of sex shops, easing one of the pressures for finding a relationship.
“Men go to brothels or massage parlours, fuelled by after-work drinks with their colleagues. That sort of thing is common. Actually, they brag ‘I met this type,’ or ‘mine was so hot,’ to each other. It’s all part of the fun.”
At the top of a banal apartment block in Tokyo is a woman who has seen it all.
Ai Aoyama, aka Queen Love, is a former dominatrix turned sex and relationship therapist, who says that when sex is on tap there’s no incentive to be in a relationship.
“There are lots of places for men to have fun. Men don’t have to bother having a girlfriend,” she explains.
Ai Aoyama’s clients are mostly in their twenties and thirties and lacking the confidence to talk to a ‘real woman’.
“Young people in today’s Japan are into a virtual world where they meet very pretty girls. A flesh and blood girl is scary, she might disobey you.”
Watching Ai treat a client using chanting, hypnosis, massage and bells seems like a far cry from her former work as a dominatrix but she sees it as a “natural progression”.
Back then, her clients were overworked and stressed out salarymen who enjoyed being her slave.
“With me binding and whipping them, the men were healed of their worries from the outside world, like troubles at work,” she says.
Ai believes Japan’s corporate culture is affecting what’s happening in the country’s bedrooms.
“Really, if this continues, problems like declining birth rates will get worse”.
Ai’s solution to the problem is to “to adopt polygamy”.
“It involves one excellent man and allows a number of women to bear his children,” she said.
Social and cultural norms aside, that man may have a hard time supporting all those children.
Money, finding a house, and increasingly, work, top the reasons both men and women give as obstacles to marriage.
For men, just how soon they want to get married directly relates to their employment.
Full-time employees are keener to tie the knot than those in temporary or part-time employment.
But for both men and women aged between18-34, full-time work is on the decline.
More the half of young people in Japan are temporary workers, according to Makoto Iwahashi, who works for labor NGO, POSSE.
Makoto says the culture of overwork has existed for decades - extra hours once meant permanent work, promotions and high salaries - but these days, that’s not the case.
“There’s no prospect of young people having kids or having a family because their salaries are not going to go up,” he says.
“They don’t know what they are going to be doing a month from now. Working conditions have completely changed.”
Calls to POSSE’s worker’s hotline have increased from a few hundred in 2006 to around 5,000 this year.
Makoto says the complaints are mostly about so-called ‘black companies’ that treat workers as disposable.
“They're hiring 200 people in one year and 200 quit in one year, and then they are hiring 200 the next year and that 200 quits a year after that.”
The other issue they receive calls on is overwork and in Japan it’s deadly.
“The word ‘karoshi’ literally means death from overwork in Japanese,” Makoto said.
Last financial year, 190 people officially died or attempted suicide due to karoshi.
It took eight months for Matsuri Takahashi to go from a bright young woman who’d gained a coveted position at advertising giant Dentsu to a shadow of herself, surviving on just ten hours sleep a week.
On Christmas Day 2015, the 24-year-old took her own life at a company dormitory.
“Thank you, Mum, for everything you’ve done for me.
“Everything about my life and work is hard.
Matsuri had worked more than 100 hours per month overtime in the lead up to her death.
Her mother Yukimi Takahashi still lives in the small house where her daughter grew up. Matsuri’s bedroom is filled with her childhood things, old photographs and lots of pink and sparkles.
Mrs Takahashi says the grief is so all-consuming she still finds it “hard to breathe”. The reason she continues to talk about Matsuri’s death is because she wants the world to know what effect Japan’s working culture is having on young people.
“The Japanese working environment claimed my daughter’s life and continues to claim the lives of other women like her. I want people to know that.”
Dentsu was fined ¥500,000 - approximately AU$6,000- and the company president stepped down, but no one was prosecuted.
Makoto Iwahashi says a harsher penalty is unlikely to have made any difference.
“This is not just a Dentsu problem, this is a problem which is happening in every single workplace”.
Matsuri’s suicide re-focused the government’s attention on karoshi and in July this year it brought in new laws it says will improve the country’s work-life balance.
The legislation includes equal pay for equal work regardless of employment status and caps overtime at 100 hours extra a month, though some white-collar workers earning over a certain amount are exempt. 
But as Makoto points out, that’s twenty hours more than the government’s own definition of what puts a worker at risk of karoshi.
“It’s ridiculous. There is no law the company has to follow on keeping the actual number of hours that a worker works, so they can just forge timesheets,” he says.
Makoto doesn’t believes the government is committed to real change
“There are a lot of companies and business agencies donating huge amount of money to the government and to the ruling party.”
Some young people in Japan are already trying to change things themselves; joining start-ups, freelancing or choosing jobs with more flexible hours.
Sushi chef Yuki Chizui for example has created a flexible workplace for her staff and makes sure she takes time out for herself - time she says can be spent with her significant other when she finds him.
But so long as a culture of overwork and uncertain employment exists many of Japan’s millennials may continue to struggle to find love.
As 26-year-old Taiyo Hashimoto says, “to put it simply, the longer we work, the less time we have to ourselves.”
If you would like to talk to someone about your mental health, here are some people ready for your call:
• SANE Australia Helpline 1800 18 SANE (7263) www.sane.org
• beyondblue support service line 1300 22 46 36
• Lifeline 13 11 14 www.lifeline.org.au
• MensLine Australia 1300 78 99 78 www.mensline.org.au
SBS acknowledges the traditional owners of country throughout Australia.

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