From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bangladeshis in Japan (在日バングラデシュ人, Zainichi
Banguradeshujin
?) form one of the smaller populations
of foreigners in Japan. As of
2005, Japan's Ministry of Justice
recorded 11,055 Bangladeshi nationals among the total
population of registered foreigners in Japan.[1]
Migration
history
Bangladeshi labour migration to Japan, in common with that to
other economically developed parts of East Asia, namely South Korea and Taiwan, is believed to have begun around 1985.
Prospective workers would obtain student visas to enter into
language schools, which would allow them to work legally up to 20
hours per week to support themselves; they used their period of
study to put down roots in Japan and find more permanent full-time
work. Such migration reached a peak in 1988, but dropped off
sharply in 1989 as Japanese authorities tightened the requirements
for obtaining student visas.[2]
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, deportations jumped sharply,
with nearly five thousand in 1990 alone; however, both new arrivals
and previous deportees turned to people smugglers to re-enter the
country. A 2007 survey estimated that a quarter of illegal migrants
from Bangladesh arrived after April 1989. Even after the bursting
of the Japanese asset price
bubble, their wages remained relatively high, typically
exceeding 150% of the minimum wage; Bangladeshi migrants prefer
Japan to Saudi
Arabia or the United Arab Emirates and consider
it a more "prestigious destination" due to the higher wages which
continue to be offered.[3]
Demographic
characteristics
Bangladeshi migrants in Japan tend to come from a middle-class
background. While fewer than four percent of Bangladeshis overall
had higher educational background, nearly 30% of Bangladeshis in
Japan had graduated from secondary schools.[2]
This meant that they were more educated not only than their peers
in their home country, but other groups of migrant workers in
Japan. Over 80% of migrants are estimated to come from Munshiganj
District, south of Dhaka;
they are also quite young, with some having come directly after
university graduation and lacking any further employment
experience.[3]
They are spurred to leave Bangladesh due to high unemployment and
low salaries; however, upon arriving in Japan, they find themselves
limited to so-called "3D" ("Dirty, Dangerous and
Demeaning") jobs beneath their qualifications, though at much
higher salaries than they could have earned at home.[2]
Men outnumber women by a ratio of nearly four-to-one.[1]
Bangladeshi migrants remain in Japan for an average of nearly
seven years before returning home, each remitting US$59,068 ($739/month). They enjoy
some social mobility due to the money they saved while abroad; one
survey, which focused on Dhaka residents returned from Japan, found
that over 50% used their funds to start their own businesses upon
their return, rather than attempting to remigrate to Japan or other
destinations and continue at menial jobs. Housing was not a popular
use of funds saved, though 50% of migrants who remained in Japan
for longer than five years purchased land in Bangladesh.[3]
See also
References
- ^ a
b
c
国籍別外国人登録者数の推移 (Change in
number of registered foreigners by nationality), Japan:
National Women's Education Centre, 2005, http://winet.nwec.jp/toukei/save/xls/L100080.xls, retrieved
2008-04-08
- ^ a
b
c
d
e
Sakurai, Keiko (July
2003), 日本のムスリム社会 (Japan's Muslim Societies), Chikuma
Shobō, pp. 78–85, ISBN
4-480-06120-7
- ^ a
b
c
Higuchi, Naoto (May
2007), "Do Transnational Migrants
Transplant Social Networks? Remittances, Investments, and Social
Mobility Among Bangladeshi and Iranian Returnees from Japan",
8th Asia Pacific Migration Research Network Conference,
UNESCO, http://apmrn.anu.edu.au/conferences/8thAPMRNconference/12.Higuchi.pdf, retrieved
2008-04-08
Further
reading
- Mahmood, Raisul
A. (1994), "Adaptation to a new world: experience of Bangladeshis
in Japan", International Migration (Geneva, Switzerland)
32 (4): 513–32