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Date: 2007-06-26 07:51 pm (UTC)The hikkikomori issue is a tricky one, since the reasons people have for choosing to shut themselves in varies. Some don't want to join the rough, thankless lifestyle that the Japanese corporate world offers them, while others have suffered from being bullied or harassed. The solution for this problem won't be a simple one, although that seems to be the one that people are looking for.
In general, I think a lot of younger people feel that they don't have a lot of control over their nation or their surroundings (my favorite example: Kobe politicians are still building the Kobe airport that 70% of the people voted against). My pet theory is that once the more traditional elements of Japan's corporate and political world retire/pass away, Japan's younger generation could make some interesting changes to Japanese society. A few young CEOs are already implementing changes in the corporate world. Last Friday at the hostel in Santa Monica, I met a young woman from Japan who told me that she preferred working for a Merrill-Lynch branch office in Japan because the company requires no "unpaid overtime" and the atmosphere of the company is more relaxed than the atmosphere of a Japanese company. An indicator of things to come perhaps? We'll see...