20% of Japs Risking Working Themselves to Death

Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
October 8, 2016

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I know this feel. I’m about a week away.

But seriously though – dying of work is a lot better than dying of boredom.

RT:

A new Japanese government poll has shown that a fifth of the country’s employees face the risk of death from overwork.

The survey was part of the first research into what the Japanese call ‘karoshi,’ which literally translates to ‘death from overwork.’ The study, which has been endorsed by the cabinet of the country’s premier, Shinzo Abe, was published on Friday.

The research targeted some 10,000 companies and 20,000 workers, of which 1,743 companies and 19,583 workers responded over two months, between December 2015 and January 2016.

The Japanese are notoriously known for their strict work culture and putting in long hours. Hundreds of deaths from overwork are recorded every year, most of which are due to strokes, heart attacks, or suicide.

Suicides are an especially acute problem. According to National Police Agency statistics cited by the Japan Times, 2,159 people took their own lives due, at least in part, to work-related problems in 2015.

The study, which provides details on overwork in the Japan, found that about 21 percent of Japanese employees log 49 or more hours per week, while in the US, the UK, and France the figures stand at between 10 and 15 percent, on average.

Moreover, 22.7 percent of enterprises reported that some of their workers put in more than 80 hours of overtime per month. This extra 80 hours – some four hours per day – is officially known as the threshold after which risk of death escalates dramatically.

However, the sky’s the limit – 11.9 percent of companies said they had workers logging more than 100 hours of extra time per month. Almost 30 percent of these overworked employees are employed in IT and communications, the study showed.

Other areas in which employees tend to work extra-long hours, are academia, postal services, and transport.

More importantly, not only do the Japanese spend a lot of time at work, but they also feel a great amount of stress because of this.

The number of compensation claims brought by the relatives of karoshi victims jumped to a record high of 1,456 in the fiscal year ending March 2015, according to labor ministry data, with most cases reported in healthcare, social services, shipping, and construction.