The Dark Side of Japanese Work Culture

The other day, @azircon asked me about the dark side of Japan’s work culture. Most of the time, I don’t like focusing on the negative, but there is a lot here, as anyone who has read anything past the surface of Japanese culture can tell you. So let’s dive in. I’ll try to be even-handed here and give some balance, but this will be largely on the negative side.


Japan’s postwar miracle was built on devotion. Long hours, total loyalty, and group cohesion were celebrated as virtues. That generation rebuilt a nation. But their descendants inherited not just the prosperity, but also the pressure that came with it.

Let’s just step through some of these pressures, starting with perhaps the most pervasive one.

The Culture of Staying Late

In many Japanese companies, no one wants to leave before their boss. The result is an unspoken rule: you stay until the last manager leaves. It’s not written anywhere, but everyone knows it. You might finish your actual work by 6 p.m., but you’ll sit there pretending to type until 9 because going home early means you “lack commitment.” You’ll find Japanese salarymen are masters of pretending to be busy when they aren’t. It’s a survival technique in Japan.

There’s a word for this: サービス残業 (sābisu zangyō) — “service overtime”. It’s unpaid, but expected. People joke about it, but quietly resent it. It’s one of those jokes that isn’t funny.

The Early Bird and the Dead Bird

On the other side of that same coin is the morning race. Arriving early is seen as a sign of diligence, even when it serves no purpose. The trains fill with salarymen half-asleep, neckties askew, clutching convenience-store coffee as they shuffle toward their desks an hour before the day starts.

The irony is brutal: being early and staying late cancels out sleep, family time, and health — but not the performance review. Promotions rarely come from efficiency; they come from presence.

As you might imagine, this leads to a corporate culture where the people who are promoted are the best at playing the game, not the most competent workers. Of course this happens in the West too, as everyone knows, but Japan takes it to an entirely different level.

The Nomikai Trap

Then there are the drinking parties, 飲み会 (nomikai). On paper they sound good. Free booze and the chance to mingle with the boss outside the strict politeness culture. And yeah, they can be that. Sometimes.

They are nominally “optional”, but… not really. A junior who skips too many risks being labeled unfriendly or insincere and might give up any chance of ever being promoted. These nights can blur the line between bonding and obligation.

At their best, they break hierarchy for an evening and let everyone relax. At their worst, they’re a kind of soft coercion: stay late, drink hard, laugh at the manager’s jokes, and then wake up to do it all again. Combine this with the two points above, and it’s not much of an exaggeration to say that some salarymen only see their families on weekends — if that.

The Middle Manager Problem

The postwar company system created a stable but stagnant hierarchy. Many of today’s middle managers are survivors of that system. These are men who rose by endurance, not innovation. They became experts in meetings, not in management. Their job is often to “coördinate”, meaning to ensure no one takes risks that could disturb harmony.

Japan still produces brilliant engineers and designers, but their ideas often suffocate under layers of approval stamps and red tape.

The 1980s powerhouse companies — Sony, Toshiba, Sharp, etc — these Japanese companies so dominated the global landscape that the US worried about Japanese hostile takeovers of all key companies and there were actually books published warning of a future war with Japan based on this “economic terrorism”.

These companies were victims of their own bureaucracies and that did them in. Of these powerhouses, only Sony remains, and it’s a shell of its former self — kept alive largely by the unexpected success of the PlayStation.

The Cost of Harmony

All of this ties back to 和 (wa), “harmony”. It’s a beautiful concept, but in the office it often means don’t stand out. Don’t challenge the boss. Don’t leave early. Don’t skip the party. Just fit in.

For decades, that worked. It made Japan a symbol of collective excellence. But as the global economy shifted toward speed, creativity, and flexibility, Japan’s rigid hierarchies became liabilities. Harmony turned into hesitation. Dedication turned into burnout.

A Quiet Change

So, yeah. That’s the bad.There’s room for nuance, and I could list more, but that gives you the general picture.

There are companies trying to change. Startups, foreign-owned firms, and even a few traditional giants are experimenting with remote work, flexible hours, and merit-based promotion. But cultural inertia runs deep. Until “going home on time” stops being seen as selfish, real reform will be slow.

Still, I’ve met countless Japanese workers who dream of balance, who want to be productive and present at home. Change in Japan is like the seasons: slow, but inevitable.

Have you ever experienced this kind of silent pressure—where “optional” doesn’t really mean optional? I’d love to hear your thoughts.

Hi there! David is an American teacher and translator lost in Japan, trying to capture the beauty of this country one photo at a time and searching for the perfect haiku. He blogs here and at laspina.org. Write him on Bluesky.

【Support @dbooster with Hive SBI】



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(Edited)

Thank you for writing this. I wanted to get a feeling from your personal perspective.

I have watched volumes of YouTube videos on the subject but still wasn’t sure if all of that is true or am I missing something. Looks like I am not.

The trouble doesn’t seem fixable at this point because it hasn’t been fixed in the last 80 years while rest of the world has moved on. The fact that the magic of Japan is still alive is a true testament to its disciplined and dedicated population. But it is crumbling from within and I don’t see a solution. The modern Japanese kids can’t remain a dedicated salaryman which watching the rest of the world pass by.

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The common refrain among the young here is, “Change will happen when all the Shōwa generation retires or dies.” Technically, that means anyone born during Emperor Hirohito’s reign, but in practice it mostly refers to the Baby Boomers. In that way, the attitudes of young Japanese aren’t terribly different from those of young Westerners.

Change is happening, but like I said, it’s slow. Will it come before it’s too late? I do think we’re facing an economic reckoning here that will force change one way or another. After the bubble burst in 1989, we had the “lost decade”... then another... and now, nearly forty years later, things still haven’t really improved.

The Shōwa generation quietly endured. Here’s a word you should know: 我慢 (gaman). It means patience, endurance, stoic perseverance. It was their attitude. But their children are far less accepting, and there’s a lot of anger simmering under the surface.

Again: parallels to the U.S. In America, Trump tapped into that anger and redirected it into the MAGA movement. In Japan, we’re seeing something similar: a growing right-wing that’s becoming louder and bolder, pushing to remove Article 9 (the clause in the constitution that forbids Japan from maintaining an army or going to war) and blaming foreigners for domestic problems.

I don’t know if the problems are unfixable. We can’t go back. We’ll never return to the postwar economic miracle or the tech powerhouse of the 1980s. But there will be change ahead, for better or worse.

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Yes, I am reading about the current right wing government too. It is currently a populist movement in many count of the world. Like everything else this will pass too. The problem is we don’t know what we will be left with afterwards, not just Japan but elsewhere as well.

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I choose to be optimistic and think that we will come out of this tailspin (both in Japan and in the US) before disaster, but who knows. I hope anyway!

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(Edited)

I think you nailed it. From my own experience living there, I saw a lot of this with my own eyes. I remember a time when I worked in a restaurant (and taught English in the daytime) that had just opened a few months before I started, and me being the gaijin got every sunday off, but the kitchen full time staff to my surprise had been working everyday since opening without even one day off! We were all on salary, paid monthly of course.

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I've heard that same story so many times. Often it involves the weird twist where the gaijin is angry about how low his salary is, finally complains, only to find that the Japanese are making less than half what he is (and working more). 😂

It's a wonderful country, but certainly there are many issues...

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You know, the more I read and learn about it, more angry I get :)

It is like watching a slow moving train going towards a bridge that has been taken out! There is nothing you can do as an observer, but you do wish at least some of the people would jump off the train. Yes, it is going to hurt and you will likely get scratches, but if you don't jump, it is certain death!

You are yelling for the people to jump off this slow moving train!

Yet, no one jumps!

My goodness, what a nightmare!

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haha join the club 😃 Many of us have been yelling for many many years.

If you want a great book about all this, look up "Dogs and Demons" by Alex Kerr. Here it is

https://amazon.com/Dogs-Demons-Tales-Dark-Japan/dp/0809039435

It is slightly out of date at this point, but he does lay out very well the problems of modern Japan. He takes pains not to bash, but he also doesn't hold back. It's a very enlightening read.

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I also heard that if a guy goes home too early his wife will ask him why are you home so early, why are you not at nomikai. So many guys just hang around in the streets or eat by themselves instead of going home.

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I think that was more a thing of the war generation, not the Boomers. There used to be a joke that the first and only thing a man would tell his wife among getting home was "Meshi, furo, neru!"  —  meaning "food, bath, sleep". Marriages of that time were all by matchmakers and rarely involved love, just two sides that knew their roles: working almost 24/7 for the men and keeping the home, raising the kids, and making sure the men worked 24/7 for the women.

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No wonder, my favorite author, Murakami writes so much about Japanese housewife and "older girlfriends"! :)

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That reminds me of the old Groucho quip:

Here's to our wives and girlfriends... may they never meet!

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I was talking to my brother in law as we were heading down to Virginia and I was telling him what you said about people having to hire someone to quit for them over in Japan. He couldn't believe it. I honestly wish people were that loyal here sometimes. It doesn't really get you much anymore though.

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More loyalty from the company side might fix both things. I can imagine that companies that actually paid a fair wage instead of cutting wages as low as possible so that the CEO can have another bonus would retain workers better — and companies that treated workers like humans in Japan might also avoid people even wanting to quit in the first place.

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It sounds like a really brutal environment over there!

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That culture of hard work is one that's going to take some serious time to change. When it's beat into your head to be in before the boss and out after the boss goes home, that's what's expected and what you do. Healthy, no... It's good to hear some of those companies are trying to change, to keep up with international companies these days they almost have to!

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Yeah it's hard. When the entire culture has been based on these things for the past 80 years, change isn't going to be easy. But I think it is coming — finally!

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There's a lot of that in the US, too, and it is more noticeable the higher up the ladder one is. The average workers leave at the official "quitting time" or shortly thereafter. But, their bosses stay longer. And the managers of those bosses stay even longer. It is seen as dedication to the job as well as "company loyalty." But those who stay late here aren't "pretending" to work, but actually crunching numbers, printing reports for the coming morning's staff meeting, putting the finishing touches on a presentation for a big client, etc. I know that by virtue of being in middle-management positions in the past, often putting in 10-, 12-, 14-hour days during that time.

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