Japan's Internet Cafes: Home for the Underemployed

Ceewan

Famished
Jul 23, 2008
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By Shiho Fukada on July 11, 2013

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Over the past 10 years, Internet cafes in Japan have become hotels for the underemployed. Many are equipped with tiny private booths, showers, and laundry service and offer reasonably priced packages for overnight users. The monthly rate at one cafe is 1,920 yen ($19) a day. In 2007, according to Japan’s Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare, 60,900 people spent a night at an Internet cafe, and about 5,400 were living in them full time.

Finding residents willing to be photographed wasn’t easy. In 2009, I started by waiting outside cafes at night, approaching people arriving with suitcases. No one wanted to talk. People living in Internet cafes are not proud of it and want to keep their living and working conditions secret. The cafes themselves share this discretion: Only one of the several I approached, Cyber@cafe in Tokyo, granted me access. Akihiro Sato, the owner, believes his business is helping those who would otherwise be homeless.


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Tadayuki Sakai
Sakai, 43, worked for a credit card company as a salaryman for 20 years. After a transfer to debt collection, he quit before his daughter’s college graduation and moved into Cyber@cafe. He currently works as a telephone operator and a temp at a friend’s computer systems company. After 16 months he’s tired of living in a 4.3 feet by 8.5 feet cubicle and says he feels chronically fatigued. “Living in the Internet cafe was like a joke in the beginning. I was excited to start a new life after being a salaryman,” he says. Now “it has become a daunting reality.” He’s hoping to move into an empty office at his friend’s company as soon as possible.

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Lisa

Lisa, who declined to give her last name, is 18. Her family lived in Fukushima, but couldn’t afford housing after losing their jobs following the 2011 earthquake and tsunami. Her mother came first to Tokyo to look for work, and Lisa followed. They’ve lived in adjoining booths for 16 months.

In Fukushima, Lisa was a cashier in a convenience store for 650 yen an hour. In the past three months she’s had about 15 job interviews at convenience stores, a supermarket, and a lunch box stand, all which pay about 1,000 yen an hour.

Her mother is an office clerk. Each day at about 9 a.m., Lisa walks to the train station with her. Then she goes to a job interview—if she has one. If not, she stays at the cafe all day trying to get a high school diploma online. The cafe’s near the red-light district, and she’s scared of “dirty old men” who proposition her. “I feel depressed in the booth and sleep a lot,” she says.



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Fumiya

Fumiya, 27, has lived at the cafe for 22 months. He looked for an apartment but was unable to find one he could afford. He initially rented a private booth for 12 hours just to sleep, soon realized he could live there, and chose a monthly package. It’s cheaper than renting an apartment because he doesn’t have to pay utilities. Fumiya works as a security guard at a long-term construction site and thinks he’ll have a job there until the project is complete. He says he needs about 1 million yen to pay for a security deposit, real estate agent fees, and furniture for an apartment in Tokyo. He guesses it should take two to five years to save that much, but he’s having trouble. He spends a lot of money on alcohol and food, which he can’t prepare at the cafe.

source:
http://www.businessweek.com/articles/2013-07-11/japans-internet-cafes-home-for-the-underemployed

Text and photographs by Shiho Fukada
 
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kengc

New Member
Apr 7, 2008
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A difficult read, especially about the girl from fukushima. Japan seems to be heading further down the 'temp worker' path so i don't see this situation getting better any time soon.
 

Belion

Active Member
Nov 20, 2009
378
185
Oh man I though my country is worst when it comes to finding a job and renting a house after reading this its kinda the same like ours is it like this for a long time even if there is no earthquake happened before.. Man this is so depressing for a country like japan whats the government doing from these kindoff problems they should take notice about this problem..
 

isityours

People don't dance no mo'
Sep 27, 2008
2,886
4,135
these people are called 'Internet cafe refugees' (インターネットカフェー難民) if i remember correctly and it can be very difficult to get out. some places also provide its clients with a proof of residence (the address of the cafe) as an address is a necessity when job hunting.
 

aquamarine

I Know Better Than You
Mar 19, 2007
4,556
127
I go to an internet cafe every Wednesday afternoon in Kaihim-Makuhari, have been for the last year or so. It has 84 'rooms' and in that time, I've met and become friends with 19 individuals who 'live' there, sadly out of that group, 3 have already killed themselves. So much for a wonderful country that you all seem to think it is.
 

monkeychicken

Active Member
Feb 3, 2009
137
49
well said, aquamarine; the end of your post, that is.
I've been thinking of starting a blog of sorts with such sentiment, as I tire of the picture postcard image that even the citizens seem to swallow hook-line-and sinker.

However, if there is already such a site or blog, I suppose I'll skip it. Do you know of such a spot?
 

aquamarine

I Know Better Than You
Mar 19, 2007
4,556
127
Nope, just start one.
 

isityours

People don't dance no mo'
Sep 27, 2008
2,886
4,135
on a somewhat related note, tonights "Close-Up" was on the so-called "Illegal Houses" that are popping up in tokyo. shady companies rent whole office buildings (often smallish size ones of 5 or six floors) and divide the floors into makeshift cubicles of about 3 meters by 4 meters with a bed in each one. these are then rented for about 30,000 yen a month and provide the residents with an address. this is because to rent an apartment requires rent in advance (2-3 months usually), real estate agents fees, "Thank you" money and bond can be more than a million yen plus the necessity of a guarantor. these rooms do not require any of this.
there can be as many as 20 people a floor and 5 or 6 floors. multiply that by 30,000 and theres a tidy profit to be made.
 

dogmadogma

El Dorado
Jan 5, 2007
8
0
This is the real Japan. The Otaku and Weaboos who think Japan is all that should feel very glad that they are in a very good condition and have a near perfect life. There is a saying goes that if you are happy and contended for, you don't realize the luck you were blessed with until you are in the same situation as those misfortune people. The popular media try very hard to keep secret of their miserable life. Thanks to Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's hotheadedness and the Japanese economic turmoil (the yen to dollar ratio is almost 100 to 1 now), it will only get worst. :scared:
 

isityours

People don't dance no mo'
Sep 27, 2008
2,886
4,135
This is the real Japan

speaking in hyperbole? usually not the most effective discussion tool. this is one facet of life for a really really small percentage of people in japan (at a guess probably something like 0.0001% of the population). it is however nothing compared to what more than a third of the worlds population faces everyday. not many drones headed for your local internet cafe for example.....
 

chopchop

New Member
Oct 7, 2012
7
0
Nice read, bit of a sobering thought. I feel sorry for all those unfortunate people who find themselves in this kind of predicament through no fault of their own, and is often almost impossible to get out of without some kind of outside help.