Youngsters are fleeing Japan’s once-mighty civil service
Why would anyone sane and talented work for it?
“WE WORK for the nation, not for the cabinet minister,” crows Kazagoshi Shingo, the hero of “The Summer of Bureaucrats”, a Japanese novel. Kazagoshi, an official at the ministry of trade and industry, refuses to rise from his seat to greet his minister, a politician only nominally above him in the hierarchy. Published in 1975, the book captured the power of Japanese mandarins during the post-war boom, when graduates from elite universities clamoured for jobs in marquee ministries. Top bureaucrats had status and power akin to top bankers. They made the machinery of the Japanese state whir.
Explore more
This article appeared in the Asia section of the print edition under the headline “Kasumigaseki Blues”
Asia September 14th 2024
- The scary new map of the South China Sea
- Can India’s garments industry benefit from Bangladesh’s turmoil?
- What ilish, a fish, says about India-Bangladesh relations
- The downfall of a Philippine mayor may be linked to Chinese gangs
- Kim Beom-su, the billionaire founder of Kakao, faces trial
- Youngsters are fleeing Japan’s once-mighty civil service
Discover more
The Adani scandal takes the shine off Modi’s electoral success
The tycoon’s indictment clouds the prime minister’s prospects
Priyanka Gandhi: dynastic scion, and hope of India’s opposition
Poised to enter parliament, she may have bigger ambitions than that
The Caspian Sea is shrinking rapidly
This has big implications for Russia, which has come to rely on Central Asian ports
Racial tensions boil over in New Zealand
A controversial bill regarding Maori people punctures its relative harmony
Once a free-market pioneer, Sri Lanka takes a leap to the left
A new president with Marxist roots now dominates parliament too
The mystery of India’s female labour-force participation rate
A good news story? Maybe