For Some in Japan, Home Is a Tiny Plastic Bunk

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Ripclawe

Banned
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/02/business/global/02capsule.html?pagewanted=print

For Atsushi Nakanishi, jobless since Christmas, home is a cubicle barely bigger than a coffin — one of dozens of berths stacked two units high in one of central Tokyo’s decrepit “capsule” hotels.

“It’s just a place to crawl into and sleep,” he said, rolling his neck and stroking his black suit — one of just two he owns after discarding the rest of his wardrobe for lack of space. “You get used to it.”

When Capsule Hotel Shinjuku 510 opened nearly two decades ago, Japan was just beginning to pull back from its bubble economy, and the hotel’s tiny plastic cubicles offered a night’s refuge to salarymen who had missed the last train home.

Now, Hotel Shinjuku 510’s capsules, no larger than 6 1/2 feet long by 5 feet wide, and not tall enough to stand up in, have become an affordable option for some people with nowhere else to go as Japan endures its worst recession since World War II.


Once-booming exporters laid off workers en masse in 2009 as the global economic crisis pushed down demand. Many of the newly unemployed, forced from their company-sponsored housing or unable to make rent, have become homeless.

The country’s woes have led the government to open emergency shelters over the New Year holiday in a nationwide drive to help the homeless. The Democratic Party, which swept to power in September, wants to avoid the fate of the previous pro-business government, which was caught off-guard when unemployed workers pitched tents near public offices last year to call attention to their plight.

“In this bitter-cold New Year’s season, the government intends to do all it can to help those who face hardship,” Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama said in a video posted Dec. 26 on YouTube. “You are not alone.”

On Friday, he visited a Tokyo shelter housing 700 homeless people, telling reporters that “help can’t wait.”

Mr. Nakanishi considers himself relatively lucky. After working odd jobs on an Isuzu assembly line, at pachinko parlors and as a security guard, Mr. Nakanishi, 40, moved into the capsule hotel in Tokyo’s Shinjuku district in April to save on rent while he worked night shifts at a delivery company.

Mr. Nakanishi, who studied economics at a regional university, dreams of becoming a lawyer and pores over legal manuals during the day. But with no job since Christmas, he does not know how much longer he can afford a capsule bed.

The rent is surprisingly high for such a small space: 59,000 yen a month, or about $640, for an upper bunk. But with no upfront deposit or extra utility charges, and basic amenities like fresh linens and free use of a communal bath and sauna, the cost is far less than renting an apartment in Tokyo, Mr. Nakanishi says.

Still, it is a bleak world where deep sleep is rare. The capsules do not have doors, only screens that pull down. Every bump of the shoulder on the plastic walls, every muffled cough, echoes loudly through the rows.

Each capsule is furnished only with a light, a small TV with earphones, coat hooks, a thin blanket and a hard pillow of rice husks.

Most possessions, from shirts to shaving cream, must be kept in lockers. There is a common room with old couches, a dining area and rows of sinks. Cigarette smoke is everywhere, as are security cameras. But the hotel staff does its best to put guests at ease: “Welcome home,” employees say at the entrance.

“Our main clients used to be salarymen who were out drinking and missed the last train,” said Tetsuya Akasako, head manager at the hotel.

But about two years ago, the hotel started to notice that guests were staying weeks, then months, he said. This year, it introduced a reduced rent for dwellers of a month or longer; now, about 100 of the hotel’s 300 capsules are rented out by the month.

After requests from its long-term dwellers, the hotel received special government permission to let them register their capsules as their official abode; that made it easier to land job interviews.

At 2 a.m. on one recent December night, two young women watched the American television show “24” on a TV inside the sauna. One said she had traveled to Tokyo from her native Gunma, north of the city, to look for work. She intended to be a hostess at one of the capital’s cabaret clubs, where women engage in conversation with men for a fee.

The woman, 20, said she was hoping to land a job with a club that would put her up in an apartment. She declined to give her name because she did not want her family to know her whereabouts.

“It’s tough to live like this, but it won’t be for too long,” she said. “At least there are more jobs here than in Gunma.”

The government says about 15,800 people live on the streets in Japan, but aid groups put the figure much higher, with at least 10,000 in Tokyo alone. Those numbers do not count the city’s “hidden” homeless, like those who live in capsule hotels. There is also a floating population that sleeps overnight in the country’s many 24-hour Internet cafes and saunas.

The jobless rate, at 5.2 percent, is at a record high, and the number of households on welfare has risen sharply. The country’s 15.7 percent poverty rate is one of the highest among industrialized nations.

These statistics have helped shatter an image, held since the country’s rise as an industrial power in the 1970s, that Japan is a classless society.

“When the country enjoyed rapid economic growth, standards of living improved across the board and class differences were obscured,” said Prof. Hiroshi Ishida of the University of Tokyo. “With a stagnating economy, class is more visible again.”

The government has poured money into bolstering Japan’s social welfare system, promising cash payments to households with children and abolishing tuition fees at public high schools.


Still, Naoto Iwaya, 46, is on the verge of joining the hopeless. A former tuna fisherman, he has been living at another capsule hotel in Tokyo since August. He most recently worked on a landfill at the city’s Haneda Airport, but that job ended last month.

“I have looked and looked, but there are no jobs. Now my savings are almost gone,” Mr. Iwaya said, after checking into an emergency shelter in Tokyo. He will be allowed to stay until Monday.

After that, he said, “I don’t know where I can go.”

The slideshow for Nakanishi is depressing but you have to cheer the guy on for keeping going.

http://www.nytimes.com/slideshow/2010/01/01/business/CAPSULESLIDE_index.html
 
I dunno, looks kinda cozy in there. If it weren't for the fact that I don't live in Japan and also have an almost instinctual dislike of closeness to fellow humans I'd jump on board in a second. That... spamlike.. meat product he's eating disturbs me on a deeply spiritual level however.
 
Soon, an incineration feature will be added.

Edit: And his capsule costs him $80 more than my apartment (minus heating bill, which would round it up at about the same price)!
 
If there were sliding doors and the "bed" was a bit thicker I would SO sleep there for a night to test it out.
 
SimplyBabyFurniture%20-%20Da%20Vinci%20Parker%20Dresser1.jpg
 
Wtf at the rent for that. Might as well get a place here in Yokohama for less and take the train into Tokyo for 30 mins (one way) everyday.
 
He pays about $35 less a month than what I pay for my apartment - 4 person, 3 full baths, 2 spacious balconies, washer/dryer, central air, etc..

A bit depressing. Hope his college education can do something for him.
 
yeah that sucks, I remember those homeless days

now I could fit about 50 of those capsules in my Loft space and my rent is only $300 per month.

I feel lucky
 
tokkun said:
We would kill for a 5.2% unemployment rate.

No shit. The British unemployment rate is around 8%.

MattKeil said:
Not really a problem in Japan.

Respecting other people's shit is a trait I appreciate in Asia. If it weren't for my Glasgow mentality, I'd feel comfortable sleeping with my apartment door unlocked at night.
 
industrian said:
No shit. The British unemployment rate is around 8%.

While we are comparing it, California = 12.3% and is probably much higher since the government is probably playing with the numbers.

Seriously its a fucked up situation for him but Japan has it decent with only 5%, hell that is considered a normal unemployment rate in most countries.
 
That 5% unemployment rate is impressive, but the welfare level is 16%, one of the highest in developed countries. This suggests that there is a lot of lowe-paying jobs that's not on par with living expenses. Unfortunately that doesn't paint a good picture for Japan's economy. I am quite interested to know what's the welfare level for other developed countries.
 
tokkun said:
We would kill for a 5.2% unemployment rate.
In reality the number is much higher. In Japan you're considered "unemployed" if you're unemployed AND registered at a job agency looking for a job.
 
tokkun said:
We would kill for a 5.2% unemployment rate.
If that was true, we would be fighting a war with Canada and Mexico in the name of something stupid, like more land, or they called us a bad name. Nothing like a war on US soil to lower the unemployment rate.
 
Imagine the hell and horror of a smelly fart in one of those glass and wooden pods. Poor fucks, but even still, at least they have some shelter. Does the hotel provide affordable meal plans?
 
Desiato said:
In reality the number is much higher. In Japan you're considered "unemployed" if you're unemployed AND registered at a job agency looking for a job.

I think that the figure for the United Kingdom is: a) You don't have a job. b) You're claiming unemployment benefits from the state. God knows how many people (like I was before I came to Korea - and still technically am) are unemployed but not receiving benefits.

And according to some analysts, another 250,000 jobs will be lost in the UK before the second quarter of 2010. Shit is fucked up man, I wonder if I'll be able to get a job when I come back to Scotland in May. I know that the first thing I'm doing after getting off the plane is adding to those statistics: my ass will need that £90 per fortnight until I get my bearings back.

theignoramus said:
Imagine the hell and horror of a smelly fart in one of those glass and wooden pods.

Japanese Ovens. Interesting.
 
tokkun said:
We would kill for a 5.2% unemployment rate.

Nomura (a major Japanese investment bank) did a study in late summer / early fall 2009 that took into account this government subsidy setup in Japan where people working in certain industries get paid by the gov't. if they aren't getting much work from their job. When this was factored in, Japan's unemployment is over 12%.

But then again, most countries are under reporting their unemployment rates. I was gonna mention how the US cooks the books for their unemployment figures, but this video does it much better:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ulu3SCAmeBA
 
akachan ningen said:
They just go into those capsules to sleep. They spend 16 hours a day out. Doesn't sound so bad to me.

If it weren't for the fact I'm a big ass dude I'd consider staying in them.
 
tokkun said:
We would kill for a 5.2% unemployment rate.

It's worse than it sounds, the job market is hugely different there. Switching jobs mid-career is still comparitively rare in Japan, and a lot of corporate hiring is done by recruiting directly from universities. People who leave their job are really looked down upon (like, my friend's wife threatened to leave him if he tried to change his horrible 16 hour a day job) and if you get fired or let go, many people still figure it's a sign that you just weren't working hard enough. It's changing little by little, but not fast enough.

The #1 problem is that it's not like the west where everybody has a resume and knows how to bang on doors to get jobs, people have just never developed those skills, or even know where to start. They have government employment help like Hello Work, but that can only get you so far. And what's worse, many companies don't even have a real ongoing mechanism for accepting new employees mid-life in teh same way they do in teh west. Because of all that, any kind of significant unemployment rate is apocalyptic for a lot of people.

Japanese society kind of shuffles you from one station of life to the next, and if you go off the rails you're in trouble. Thats somewhat true everywhere, but especially there. The guy mentioned in the article is lucky in that he's living in Tokyo, which is very progressive and sees more job mobility than anywhere else in the country. But on the downside it's one of the most expensive places on Earth, it's probably the last place in Japan I'd want to be if I was broke.
 
akachan ningen said:
They just go into those capsules to sleep. They spend 16 hours a day out. Doesn't sound so bad to me.
Reminds me of my freshman year in college...
 
I've never been homeless even though money has been hell this year (23 and living with my mom would be more embarrassing if the alternative wasn't living on the streets)

I consider myself lucky seeing stories like this, but most of all at his sheer perseverance. He has goals, dreams, and he is still working hard to achieve them. Most people wouldn't accomplish this with what he and others are going through.

Either way, I'm sad now :(
 
Chromax said:
We must have a gaffer here that tried this right?

Capsule Hotel ? Sure thing. Nothing fancy about it but not bad choice either. I would never stay more than one night because it is so expensive for what you get. Also didn't know Japan had that high poverty rate o_o

vatstep said:

Karl Farbman would not approve.
 
NetMapel said:
That 5% unemployment rate is impressive, but the welfare level is 16%, one of the highest in developed countries. This suggests that there is a lot of lowe-paying jobs that's not on par with living expenses. Unfortunately that doesn't paint a good picture for Japan's economy. I am quite interested to know what's the welfare level for other developed countries.

Lots of Japanese are working shitty, low paying jobs, at most times combined wither other, shitty jobs. A considerable number of elderly people live in poverty too. That 16% poverty rate is a good indicator of how many people are struggling (should be almost 20 million affected).

Still, this guy could live much cheaper, in a semi-decent place if he moved to the suburbs. There's places almost half the rent, and living expenses are bound to be cheaper than Shinjuku.
 
industrian said:
I think that the figure for the United Kingdom is: a) You don't have a job. b) You're claiming unemployment benefits from the state. God knows how many people (like I was before I came to Korea - and still technically am) are unemployed but not receiving benefits.

And according to some analysts, another 250,000 jobs will be lost in the UK before the second quarter of 2010. Shit is fucked up man, I wonder if I'll be able to get a job when I come back to Scotland in May. I know that the first thing I'm doing after getting off the plane is adding to those statistics: my ass will need that £90 per fortnight until I get my bearings back.
1.63 million people are claiming unemployment benefits, which was down from the month before. 31.5 million are meant to be of those who should be working in the UK. That would make unemployment at 5.1%, similar to Japan's figures. But there's more like 2.5 million unemployed. Unemployment will continue to fall even after the recession subsides, as it's a lagging indicator.
 
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