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Paid vacations

Category: Job

05/05/2008

I've been working for six months and just received my first paid vacations. Seen from abroad, Japan seems to be a country that has very few vacation days, which people usually don't even take. But does it match the reality?

As a matter of fact, Japanese people have...20 days of paid vacations per year! This is far from the usual cliché and while not as many as in France, it's still more than the USA for instance.

On top of that, there are three official vacation periods: golden week, obon (festival of the dead) and the New Year, but then the exact rules vary each year and with the company. Here's what it looks like in my case and this year:

- golden week: 3 fixed days, april 30th as well as may 5th (yep, today!) and 6th

- obon: 3 days to choose freely within a 2-month range

- New Year: 7 fixed days, last year it was from december 28th to january 6th

Adding up those numbers already makes a nice total but wait, there's more: there's also about 15 national holidays that one gets no matter what. What I mean is, in case one of those days falls on a saturday or a sunday, it is reported to the next monday. The actual rules are trickier but you get the idea.

Soooo...not bad, huh? In the end, the reality comes off as far from the one-week stereotype! However, if that cliché exists, then there has to some kind of reason behind. And indeed, everybody knows about the Japanese tourist who travel across the globe for 4 or 5 days, visiting as many places as they possibly can in such a short amount of time.

So what's the explanation to what seems like a paradox? It's very simple actually: first, it is not socially accepted to take too many vacations at once, and "too many" in this context means...one week! Yes, you read it right. The idea behind is that not being at the office puts additional work on one's colleagues and thus cannot be extended too much. This is the reason why Japanese people usually make very short trips, and instead take one day off every now and then. Secondly, and for the same reason, there are many people who do take all their vacation days...

The whole thing is also amplified by the fact that official vacation periods happen at the same dates for most companies. Consequently, travel prices shoot the roof, 25-kilometer traffic jams are frequent and hotels and stuff are overcrowded. My advice for potential travelers: avoid those periods at all cost or book well ahead...

As far as I'm concerned, I think I'm on the lucky side, as my company seems much more lenient than average. For example, when I went to France last month, my boss spontaneously offered me to take a week off to stay longer!...I just love him!...

2 comment(s)

Comments

By Elise on 10/02/2008 at 17:54:37

c'est quoi alors les périodes à éviter ?

By Tarto on 10/03/2008 at 03:04:13

Tout simplement les congés officiels, et j'ajouterais également le mois de septembre en raison du temps plutôt maussade. Entre la golden week et l'obon, donc de mi-mai à mi-août c'est nickel (avec une préférence pour mai et juin puisqu'il y a moins de gens qui partent en vacances). A savoir qu'au pic de l'été, il fait vraiment chaud au centre et au sud du Japon (entre 33 et 38 environ) donc durant cette période, Hokkaido est peut-être un meilleur choix.
Je recommande également octobre, mais pour aller à Okinawa !

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