The “1.06 million yen barrier” income condition will be abolished those who work more than 20 hours a week will be enrolled in the Employees’ Pension Insurance.
The Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare has begun making adjustments to abolish the income requirement known as the “1.06 million yen barrier” for part-time workers and others to join the Employees’ Pension Insurance. Currently, in order for part-time workers other than students, such as part-timers and casual workers, to join the Employees’ Pension Insurance, they must work more than 20 hours a week for a company with 51 or more employees and earn a monthly wage of more than 88,000 yen, or approximately an annual income of more than 1,060,000 yen. It has been learned that the Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare has begun making adjustments to abolish the requirements on company size and annual income. In recent years, as the minimum wage has been rising, the number of people who can earn an annual income of more than 1.06 million yen by working about 20 hours a week is increasing. In response to this, the government plans to abolish the annual income requirement and maintain only the requirement of working 20 hours or more per week. If the wage requirement were to be abolished, monthly insurance premiums would increase and take-home pay would decrease, but the amount of pension received would increase, with the aim of providing more security for the future. The Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare plans to discuss the issue in councils and other forums, finalize a bill by the end of the year, and submit it to the ordinary Diet session next year. 11/9 (Sat) 12:16 Distribution NTV news nnn Previous thread ★ 1 2024/11/08 (Fri) 07:43:16.66.
>>1 Tamaki’s methods haven’t changed since the Democratic Party was in power. Using non-existent financial resources (hidden funds), they promise tax cuts, deceive the people, and increase their seats in parliament. This policy is simply an unrealistic one, and it is only fooling young people who have no experience of a Democratic Party administration.
>>1 The 1.03 million yen limit should be abolished, and married couples should be allowed to deduct the amount according to the number of children under 18. For working students aged 18 and over, an age limit could be set and a separate deduction could be set. This way no financial resources are required, part-time housewives and working students can work, which helps to alleviate labor shortages and also helps address the declining birthrate.
>>1 In the national financial statements for fiscal year 2021, tax and stamp revenues were about 64 trillion yen and social security-related expenses were about 55 trillion yen In other words, 86% of tax and stamp revenues were used for social security-related expenses. In Japan, one third of the population is over 65 years old and their livelihoods are supported by social security, and two people, including people with disabilities and minors, support the lives of one elderly person, so the burden on the working generation is increasing. What Japan needs is to put to work those who are able to work but won’t. This means lowering pension amounts for people under 80, lowering welfare payments, and abolishing the 1.03 million yen threshold. Even if the 1.03 million yen threshold is raised, people who don’t work will not work until they die.
The 1.03 million barrier is being discussed for removal, while the 1.06 million barrier is being made thicker. Does the Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare have more power than the Ministry of Finance?
From now on, we’ll have to burn the Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare every day, it’s going to be such a pain. Citizens vs bureaucrats, this is a civil war.
Overseas, employment is job-based, so there is not much difference between full-time and part-time employees other than the hours they work. Japan’s employment system up until now has simply been abnormal from a global perspective.
Tamaki: “I think young people and poor people perceived me as a nice person. “You idiot, there’s no way I’m a good person lol” Tamaki lets the young, poor guy board the Espoir.
If we are going to remove the lower wall, we should also remove the upper wall and make it unlimited.The super-rich pay too little for social security, including insurance.
>>31 But the requirement for the 3rd category isn’t whether you have children or not, but that you’re married and dependent, so I don’t really understand what kind of preferential treatment there is in this system. So I think it would be appropriate to abolish the 3rd category.
Kishi is angry “Sanjapo” Kishi Hiroyuki is angry about the “1.06 million wall” → “The Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare is taking advantage of this, we should really be angry” “Unlike the 1.03 million wall,” it is “roughly a 100,000 yen increase in burden” that will wipe out any increase in income https:●//news.yahoo.co.jp/articles/215834f12a3c0807d22636163cbadb4b722907f5.
>>40 That’s because they took advantage of the weak opposition party and did whatever they wanted to bully the common people and cut out the upper class.
I don’t really care, but can’t they make it a bit simpler? The system is being built by people who graduated from Tokyo University, right? The number of foreigners will increase in the future, so please reset it.
>>42 That’s a good idea. If we reset the baby boomers at age 70 and make their pensions zero, everything will be solved and they will be able to euthanize.
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