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Four Pyramids of Power

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Women, contract employees, and smaller subsidiaries and subcontracting firms absorb risk ... side prepared for more flexible system. Rengo (union federation) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Four Pyramids of Power


1
Four Pyramids of Power
  • The Economic and Political Structure of
    Contemporary Japan

2
The Standard Three Pyramids
Govt Bureaucracy
Elected Politicians
Big Business
3
And the Hidden Fourth Pyramid
Organized Crime
Big Business
Govt Bureaucracy
Elected Politicians
4
We Will Examine
  • What each pyramid does in the society
  • The internal organization of each pyramid
  • Why each pyramid has power and gives prestige
  • How each pyramid is connected to the others
  • How people get into a pyramid and rise within it

5
Big Business The First Pyramid
Organized Crime
Big Business
Govt Bureaucracy
Elected Politicians
6
The Prewar Zaibatsu System
Family Holding Company
House Bank
Trading Company
Machine Tools
Shipbuilding Company
Light Industry
Chemicals
Heavy Industry
Consumer Goods
Mining Company
Oil Refining
7
How the Zaibatsu System Worked
  • Each Zaibatsu had a complete set of companies
  • The five Zaibatsu competed in every market
  • Together they controlled the market
  • They gained power as military grew in 1930s
  • Later became target of Occupation reforms

8
Zaibatsu Broken Up in Postwar Era
House Bank
Trading Company
Oil Refining
Shipbuilding Company
Light Industry
Chemicals
Machine Tools
Heavy Industry
Consumer Goods
Mining Company
9
Postwar Reforms
  • Family holding companies abolished
  • Individual firms separated, divided
  • Smaller companies gained foothold in market
  • Over time, firms again began to coalesce
  • Centered around major banks with prior ties

10
They Formed Horizontal Keiretsu
Major Bank
Insurance
Trading Company
Heavy Industry
Light Industry
Chemicals
Consumer Goods
Oil Refining
11
How Horizontal Keiretsu Work
  • Presidents of keiretsu firms meet regularly
  • No hierarchy or central authority
  • Firms hold part of each others stock
  • Serve as directors for each others firms
    (interlocking directorates)
  • Borrow from the same main bank
  • Purchase from group companies at good rates
  • Cooperate to protect a troubled firm

12
Large Companies Also HaveVertical Keiretsu
Relationships
Major Company
Subsidiary A
Subsidiary B
Subsidiary C
Supplier D
Supplier E
Supplier F
Supplier G
H
I
J
K
L
N
O
P
M
13
Large Companies Provide for Regular Employees
  • Long-term security or lifetime employment
  • Seniority-based wage system
  • Bonus system linked to companys success
  • Unionization in a company union
  • Internal promotion system and in-house training
  • Full fringe benefits and pension
  • Opportunities for post-retirement employment

14
Compensation for Regular Employees
Monthly Salary Includes
Special Allowances
Allowances for Family, Housing
Seniority Payment for Years of Service
Base Wage for Broad Category of Workers
PLUS
Semi-Annual Bonus
15
Basic Structure of a Single Company
Officers Directors
White-Collar and Managerial Workers
Blue Collar Workers
16
Companies Promote From Within
Officers Directors
White-Collar and Managerial Workers
Foremen, Supervisors
Blue Collar Workers
17
How Can They Do It?
  • Permanent labor force
  • restricts companys capacity to adjust to
    economic fluctuations
  • restricts companys ability to hire workers with
    specific skills
  • obligates company to pay higher wages to older
    workers

18
Permanent Workers As An Elite
  • Actually a relatively small elite
  • That status makes their jobs more competitive and
    desirable in the society
  • Their privileges are protected by a complex
    system that shifts costs to others

Where are the burdens shifted?
19
Use of Women As Short-Term Workers
Officers Directors
White-Collar and Managerial Workers
Young, single women (OLs)
Blue Collar Workers
Means Fewer Permanent Male Managers
20
Young, Female OLs
  • Regular employees, but not on promotion track
  • Must choose their track when hired
  • Company expects them to quit after they marry and
    become pregnant
  • Cant legally be fired, but pressured to leave
  • Low seniority means low cost to company
  • Now staying longer, not leaving as expected

21
Use of Contract Blue-Collar Workers
Officers Directors
Union Membership
White-Collar and Managerial Workers
Young, single women (OLs)
Contract Workers
Contract Workers
Blue Collar Workers
Provides Short-Term Labor Flexibility
22
Contract Blue-Collar Workers
  • Hired for 2-6 month contracts at the going rate
  • May be seasonal workers
  • Or just people without permanent employment
  • Provide labor flexibility without long-term cost
  • No benefits, no job security
  • Can be terminated at end of contract easily
  • Key is lack of union protection and benefits

23
Western Model of Skill or Industry Unions
White-Collar and Managerial Workers
Union Membership
Union Leadership
Foremen
Blue Collar Workers
(One industry union may cover many firms,
but some skilled trades may be in separate unions)
24
How Enterprise Unions Work
  • Only regular employees belong to union
  • Not segmented by craft skills or job category
  • Not Contract workers doing the same jobs
  • Union leadership drawn from top levels
  • Union includes workers up to lower management
  • Tied to management by promotion opportunities
  • Interests coincide, so bargaining position weak

25
White-Collar and Managerial Workers
Union Leadership
Union Membership
Young, single women (OLs)
Contract Workers
Contract Workers
Regular Blue Collar Workers
Temporary Workers contracted through Temp Agency
26
Subcontracting Work for Flexibility
Major Company
Subsidiary A
Subsidiary B
Subsidiary C
Supplier D
Supplier E
Supplier F
Supplier G
H
I
J
K
L
N
O
P
M
27
The Subcontracting System
  • Can adjust subcontracts to meet current needs
  • Just-in-time production system shifts costs
  • Subcontractors are independent small businesses
  • Subcontractors employees do not share benefits
  • Economic dependence of subcontractors varies
  • Capital and personnel may flow downward

28
Promotions and Post-Retirement Jobs
Major Company
Subsidiary A
Subsidiary B
Subsidiary C
Supplier D
Supplier E
Supplier F
Supplier G
H
I
J
K
L
N
O
P
M
29
Major Company Sometimes Bankrolls SubContractors
Cuts Pencil Blanks
Splits Pencil Blanks
Stuffs Leads
Main Tombow Pencil Company
Packs Pencils in Boxes
Puts Erasers On
Paints Pencils
30
Capital and Personnel Transfers
  • Large companies
  • transfer employees temporarily or after
    retirement
  • May provide capital and old equipment to a
    retiree
  • Provide stable work for small companies
  • Smaller Companies
  • Some promotion slots filled by people from parent
    company
  • Small company may also get talent it couldnt buy
  • In crisis, large company may dictate terms to
    borrow capital from its subcontractors

31
Large and Small Companies Interdependent
  • Large companies keep regular workforce small
  • Protect their wages, job security, and benefits
  • Women, contract employees, and smaller
    subsidiaries and subcontracting firms absorb risk
  • They get less pay, security, and benefits
  • Small companies depend on ties to large firms
  • They absorb trained workers from large firms

32
What is Happening Now?
  • Decade of recession and cutbacks
  • Permanent employment system breaking up
  • less hiring for permanent positions
  • breaking of implied contract with older workers
  • More contract work and job instability
  • increased outsourcing to temporary firms
  • more young people without permanent employment
  • more post-retirement people working to survive

33
Demographic Impact on Labor
  • Demographic factors
  • Low birthrate produces fewer young workers
  • Longer lifespans and aging population
  • High education levels and lifestyle expectations
  • Consequences for labor force
  • Smaller labor force supporting retired workers
  • Lack of workers decreases growth potential
  • But companies fear cost of longterm labor

34
Potential Solutions, New Issues
  • Expanding parameters of labor force
  • moving production overseas
  • importing foreign workers (reluctantly)
  • expanding (some) opportunities for women
  • temporary workers from outsourcing firms
  • Rejection of old labor bargain
  • employers reducing long-term commitments
  • young people rejecting corporate demands
  • alternative employment unstable
  • neither side prepared for more flexible system
  • Rengo (union federation) may support changes
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