
The Plight of Japan’s Single Mothers
Politics Society- English
- 日本語
- 简体字
- 繁體字
- Français
- Español
- العربية
- Русский
Refugees from Debt
A— is a single mother with two children, who are currently in high school and college. A— found work as a regular employee at an event management company after graduating from high school, but she was obliged to leave her job when her husband, a civil servant, was posted to a different area. When the due date for her first child was approaching, she went to stay with her mother and father (a common practice in Japan). In her absence, her husband began gambling, and by the time she returned home with her new baby, he had run up several million yen in high-interest consumer loans. The couple managed to pay them off with help from relations, and the husband vowed never to gamble again. Yet when A— went to stay with her parents while awaiting her second child, her husband again succumbed and turned to loan sharks to cover his losses. Loan payments left the family destitute. During the winter, A— and her children sat shivering in a house with no gas, pretending not to be home when the loan collectors came to call.
Fortunately, A— was not a helpless victim. She read up at the local library and came to the realization that her only way out was divorce. She returned to her parents’ home and secured a divorce through mediation. At first, the only work she could find was through a temporary staffing agency. The illness of one of her toddlers, which necessitated her presence at the hospital, made it impossible to continue in any one post long enough to stabilize her situation. After her children had begun elementary school, she was finally able to secure regular employment with a small company.
Then came problems with her older son. He managed to gain admission to a public high school, only to stop attending classes. After a confrontation with his mother, he ran away from home. Fortunately, a caring adult tracked him down. He returned home and eventually, with some academic support, was able to earn his diploma through correspondence education and enroll in college.
Quite a few single mothers cite debt problems as their reason for leaving their husbands. After the divorce, they generally have little to live on, and it can take years to achieve economic stability. Then come the challenges of parenting an adolescent. A— was fortunate in that she had the inner resources to cope with the crisis caused by her husband’s gambling debts, and the network of social relationships that she built after her divorce helped her and her son through the crises of adolescence. Still, her circumstances are by no means easy. She has had to take out substantial student loans via the Japan Finance Corporation and the Japan Student Services Organization, and the burden of repayment will fall heavily on her son.
Victims of Abuse
Another common reason for divorce is domestic violence. According to Japanese court statistics, the top reasons cited by women in divorce petitions, apart from incompatibility, are violence, emotional abuse, and the husband’s failure to provide living expenses.
B—’s case is not unusual. She married the eldest son of a farmer and moved in with her parents-in-law, who for years treated their son’s “bride” as a menial. She was expected to heat the bathwater with firewood for the rest of the family and only take a bath herself after everyone else was done and the water was cold. Even after bearing four children, she remained stuck in the role of persecuted bride. Unable to endure such treatment, she eventually prevailed on her husband to move out.
Around the same time, her husband switched jobs. Unhappy at work, he began borrowing money and subjecting B— to physical and verbal abuse. Finally, she called the police and moved out. After her divorce, she found work as a waitress but was able to earn no more than ¥50,000–¥60,000 a month. Problems with her eldest son, who had begun displaying violent behavior toward his younger siblings, made it impossible for her to devote herself to a full-time job.
The after-effects of domestic violence can linger long after divorce, and in many areas, Japanese women have little access to follow-up social services.
Inadequate Public Assistance
Compounding all these difficulties is the inadequacy of the public assistance available to Japan’s single mothers. In many countries, progressive social security and tax policies have been used to offset single mothers’ low earning power and reduce the poverty rate among single-parent households. Unfortunately, this has not been the case in Japan, and the outlook remains dim.
The two major forms of public assistance available to single mothers in Japan are the child-rearing allowance (jidō fuyō teate) — primarily for divorced parents— and the child allowance (jidō teate), a benefit for low-income households with children. But payments are low, and the government offers no relief whatsoever from the uniformly high social-insurance premiums Japanese households must pay into the health insurance and pension systems. While some help is available to cover school expenses, once the children enter high school, families are responsible for the bulk of education costs, which are considerable.
I have been lobbying for years for a more generous child-rearing allowance and other welfare benefits to support single mothers and their families. The policy makers I have spoken to are well aware that the government could alleviate poverty significantly among single-mother families by boosting the child-rearing allowance. In my view, the main obstacle to such a policy change is the persistence of hidebound attitudes toward the family and a belief that women should take personal responsibility for any hardships resulting from divorce.
As the foregoing suggests, life as a single mother in Japan is a precarious affair, often hovering between desperation and fulfillment. The outlook in given case depends heavily on the individual woman’s educational background, employment history, and social network, as well as her inner resources. While most single mothers here manage to make ends meet and give their children a decent upbringing, many are in truly dire circumstances. Until the nation rethinks its basic welfare, taxation, and employment policies, this situation is unlikely to change.
(Originally written in Japanese on July 21 and published on August 12, 2015.)
Related Tags
employment welfare poverty income gender gap domestic violence single mothers child allowance