Only 61.6% of Japan's New Grads Have Jobs
By wchung | 24 Mar, 2026
Nearly two of every five Japanese university students who graduated this spring have been unable to find full-time jobs in a stagnant economy, according to preliminary results of a survey released Thursday.
Of 552,794 students who graduated from universities this spring, only 340,546 or 61.6 percent have found full-time jobs, said the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology.
Still, the percentage represents a 0.8 percent improvement over last year when the ratio of students finding full-time jobs fell by the biggest margin on record as the economy continues to suffer from the crash that began in September 2008.
Of all the graduates, 70,642 or 12.8 percent have enrolled in graduate schools and 19,146 or 3.5 percent are working temporary jobs. The remaining 87,988, or 15.9 percent, have neither found work nor entered graduate school.
Articles
- World's 25 Most Polluted Cities All in India, Pakistan and China
- Flight Cancellation Spread Across Globe on Mideast Hub Closures
- S. Korea Calls for Nationwide Campaign to Conserve Fuel
- Vietnam Airlines Cancels Flights Due to Jet Fuel Shortage
- Alibaba's 5-nm Agentic AI Chip Unveiled As World's Most Powerful RISC-VCPU
- What's Ro Khanna's Angle with Thomas Massie?
- Top 5 Date Turn-Offs for Women and Men
- Demand Builds for Affordable Chinese EVs Among American Carbuyers
- OpenAI Bumps Up Minimum Return to 17.5% in Competition with Anthropic for Private Equity
- China's Open-Source AI Dominates Global Downloads, Threatens US Leadership
