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Permanent employment is work for an employer for which the employee receives payment directly from that employer. Permanent employees do not have a predetermined end date to employment. In addition to their wages, they often receive benefits like subsidized health care, paid vacations, holidays, sick time, or contributions. Permanent employees are often eligible to switch job positions within their companies. Even when employment is "at will", permanent employees of large companies are generally protected from abrupt job termination by severance policies, like advance notice in case of layoffs, or formal discipline procedures. They may be eligible to join a union, and may enjoy both social and financial benefits of their employment.

With exception of South Korea, France, Germany, Italy, India, and Japan, where extensive laws and regulations make firing of permanent employees nearly impossible, rarely does "permanent employment" mean employment of an individual that is guaranteed throughout the employee's working life. In the private sector, with the notable exception of academic tenure, such jobs are rare; permanent employment is far more common in the public sector, where it is often used to strengthen civil service independence from politicians. Permanent employment is often considered the gold standard for employee life quality and society development as it gives stability and peace of mind to citizens. It has been seen that permanent employment gives better results for social development in the long term because of various reasons such as steady circulation of liquid wealth through wages, peaceful society, regular upskilling by companies etc.

Industry-specific examples

In Japan

Definition

A Japanese version of permanent employment often related to lifetime employment (終身雇用 shūshin koyō) defined as lifetime job contract. The term originally was workers' "lifetime commitment" to companies, which was coined by James Abegglen in his book "The Japanese Factory".

Origin

Japan's lifetime employment originated in large companies around 1910 but became widespread during the economic growth period following World War II. Before the war period, Japanese companies owed more its fund on direct financing. However, as the government started to take control of Zaibatsu, Japanese conglomerates, shareholders had difficulty in exerting their influence to them. In the enforcement of occupation policies GHQ dissolved Zaibatsu and emerging labor unions had started to claim for a higher standard of benefit.

Significance

Lifetime employment took an important role in Japan's economic prosperity. In addition to the tendency to pursue equality and loyalty between employee and employer which have their basis on the informal nexus, Confucius norm. In industrial corporations, wage system expects labor's future improvement in productivity. Therefore, the first half of contract duration labor's productivity is below the wage. However, as labor adept in their operation, the labor productivity exceeds the payment.

See also

References

  1. C., Abegglen, James (1979) . The Japanese factory. New York: Arno Press. ISBN 0405120826. OCLC 5286529.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  2. Koshiro, Kazutoshi. "Lifetime employment in Japan: three models of the concept" (PDF). Foreign Labor Developments. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Retrieved 21 August 2012.
  3. 寺西, 重郎 (1982). 日本の経済発展と金融. 岩波書店. pp. 226–229. ISBN 4000097059.
  4. Gendai Nihon keizai shisutemu no genryū. Okazaki, Tetsuji., Okuno, Masahiro, 1947-, Ueda, Kazuo, 1951-, 岡崎哲二., 奥野正寬, 1947-, 植田和男, 1951- (1-han ed.). Tōkyō: Nihon Keizai Shinbunsha. 1993. ISBN 4532130360. OCLC 29965581.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  5. Dore, Ronald (2000). Stock market capitalism : welfare capitalism : Japan and Germany versus the Anglo-Saxons. Oxford : Oxford University Press. ISBN 0199240612. OCLC 43521072.
  6. 大司, 川口; 龍, 神林; 榮愨, 金; 赫旭, 権; 諭, 清水谷; 京司, 深尾; 達治, 牧野; 泉, 横山 (2007-01-25). "年功賃金は生産性と乖離しているか―工業統計調査・賃金構造基本調査個票データによる実証分析―". 経済研究. 58 (1). hdl:10086/19684.

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