Interesting data in this article from Bloomberg, which appears in the Sankei Biz, looking at the effect of foreign flight on the restaurant business.
According to a Statistics Bureau report in March, overall employment in the restaurant business fell for the first time in eleven months. The hospitality business as a whole saw employment fall 1.9% from the previous year to 3,660,000 which was the third-largest decline of any industry, behind agriculture (-4%) and information services (-3.2%).
Hospitality is divided into hotels (which lost 30,000 employees compared with a year earlier), restaurants (down 90,000) and food delivery/take-away (roughly flat). In restaurants alone, the number of people drawing a salary but not able to work rose 33%.
Some data comparisons are difficult because the survey could not be conducted in Tohoku but it seems likely that the drop in restaurant employment is the largest since January 2010.
A Nomura Research consultant says that the restaurant industry has a relatively high dependence on foreign labour - around 2.2% of all employees are non-Japanese - but may look more to local employment in the future. 91.1% of all employees in the industry are part-timers or temps.
A Ministry of Labour report last October surveyed 108,760 workplaces and found foreign employees numbered 649,982, an increase of 14%. Manufacturers had the highest proportion followed by service companies and then hospitality businesses.
One analyst believes it is currently a buyer's market for employers and argues that labour shortages can be quickly covered.