Poverty becomes cold reality in wealthy Japan Tuesday, December 26, 2006 12:36 [IST]
Tokyo: Japan's
economic growth has enjoyed the longest expansion since the World War II, but
not everyone is smiling amid the economic recovery.
Kaori Murano may be in a minority but others like her in Japan's
emerging community of urban poor are not benefiting from the distribution of
wealth and cling on to what they can scrape together every day.
The single mother living in Tokyo juggles two jobs: administration work
and ad-posting. With average of three hours of sleep a day, she receives an
annual income of 2.16 million yen ($18,570), or about a third of the average
household income in one of the world's most-expensive cities.
"The government also gives her 100,000 yen for child
support, but she still finds herself with the equivalent of $5 a day in her
wallet. She sometimes only has water and flour to feed her three daughters,"
she says.
When looking to the future, she cannot help but pull her
hair in trying to make ends meet. "There is only despair waiting on
us," the woman in her early 30s told sources.
The government has been discussing reductions to social
benefits to fix its massive deficit accumulated over the years. It has already
cut child support to single-mother households, and now welfare assistance for
low-income residents is at risk.
"We get the impression that the government is trying to
cut us loose," Murano said.
"If the government truly intends to help
us become financially independent, it should provide the minimum security so
that we do not have to worry about ending up on the streets with children in
our arms."
More than 1.47 million people received welfare assistance
from the government as of last year, up 60 percent, in 10 years, according to
the ministry. And they fear that they will lose even basic needs such as
shelter, food and clothing.
The number of welfare recipients has continued to rise since
1995, shortly after Japan's
economic bubble burst.
Some economists say there will be no major cuts in social
contributions soon. The government of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe would not
worsen the current situation, according to Martin Schulz, senior economist at
Fujitsu Research Institute.
But he says the income gap will spread wider.
"To narrow the income gap, there needs to be a redistribution
of opportunities," Schulz said.
Japan's
estimated 640,000 young jobless are also facing a similar situation. The Abe
government has decided to double the job centres by 2007 to get more young
people to land regular employment.
But some at the bottom like Murano remain skeptical.
"There is no doubt that we have full motivation to
work," the Tokyo
resident said.
"But we need to
be sure that our financial burden is lifted and basic demand is met before we
can spend time to search better-paying job," he said. |