Japan: Toyota discloses survey results on recruitment fees paid by foreign technical intern trainees
요약
보고된 날짜: 2024년 1월 18일
위치: 일본
기업 페이지
Toyota - Other Value Chain Entity기타
Not Reported ( 중개 업소 ) - Recruiter영향받은
영향받은 사람의 수: 숫자를 알 수 없음
Migrant & immigrant workers: ( 숫자를 알 수 없음 - 베트남 , 자동차 부품 , Gender not reported , Unknown migration status )토픽들
직업소개수수료결과
응답 요청 여부: 예, Journalist에 의해 요청됨
응답을 볼 수 있는 외부 링크: (더 알아보기)
시행된 조치: Toyota publicly disclosed the fees themselves after undertaking a survey, the results of which were published in its 2023 report, 'Toyota's action taken for Forced Labour of Migrant Workers(Statement on the Modern Slavery Acts)'. One fee sharging, Toyota said in its report: "Based on the information obtained from this fee survey and international standards, we will determine the cost items that should be borne by companies accepting foreign technical intern trainees. The survey also reveals the fee amount after the relevant law changes in Vietnam. We will continue to consider such information." Yosuke Okuyama, former head of the global labor policy office at Toyota Motor Corp., told journalists "fees have been criticized by various countries as a seed of forced labor. We think it's important to convey to those in Japan and abroad that we are continually monitoring the situation regarding the acceptance of trainees and the fees."
출처: News outlet
"As Japan accepts more foreign workers, Toyota official reflects on human rights," 18 January 2024
Against the backdrop of labor shortages, the employment of foreign workers is growing in Japan...
To avoid [human rights] risks, some businesses have started to actively disclose information. The Mainichi Shimbun spoke with Yosuke Okuyama, former head of the global labor policy office at Toyota Motor Corp., which has been investigating the employment conditions of foreign workers within its group and business partners, and releasing that information...
Toyota surveyed the status of these foreign technical intern trainees, and collected evidence from trainees from Vietnam, Indonesia and China about whether they'd had to pay fees when they came to Japan. It confirmed 27 cases in which the trainees had to pay "relatively high fees." All 27 of the cases involved trainees from Vietnam, who paid the money to the dispatching organization in their home country...
High fees have been singled out as a factor preventing trainees from escaping workplaces with low wages, long hours and other serious problems...
Okuyama, who was in charge of the survey, said of the decision to publicly announce the information, "Fees have been criticized by various countries as a seed of forced labor. We think it's important to convey to those in Japan and abroad that we are continually monitoring the situation regarding the acceptance of trainees and the fees."...