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Japan's new graduate recruiting fully starts amid coronavirus scare

Jun 02 (Japan Times) - Major firms in Japan on Monday fully started interviews, written tests and other activities to hire students graduating in spring 2021, with companies and students both struggling to adjust to unprecedented online recruiting methods introduced to cope with the new coronavirus pandemic.

Major trading house Mitsubishi Corp. started holding online interviews with some 2,000 job-hunting students on Monday morning.

No students were seen at the front desk of the company's head office in Tokyo's Marunouchi business district in Chiyoda Ward, unlike around this time of the year in the past when students formed lines there to sit for job interviews.

About 70 to 80 percent of Mitsubishi Corp. interviewers are working from home, and those who are at the company's office are asked to sit in a room alone or with another interviewer while keeping some distance from each other when they hold online job interviews with students.

According to a survey by job information provider Recruit Career Co., 45.7 percent of job-seeking students had received informal job offers as of May 1, down 5.7 percentage points from the year before.

The decline came apparently because many major firms are waiting for the virus crisis to settle down in order to see students in person before making informal job offers, and because small and midsize companies that are having difficulty introducing online procedures have been suspending their hiring activities.

Mitsubishi plans to hold final interviews with candidates in person.

Takeyuki Nakagawa, leader of the company's recruiting team, said, "This is a process for both students and companies to choose whether to work with each another, so there were concerns about making decisions without letting students see the workplace and meet workers in person."

By contrast, Hitachi Ltd., which started online group interviews with students on Monday, has decided to hold final interviews online.

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An Idemitsu Kosan crude oil tanker has safely passed through the Strait of Hormuz, becoming the first vessel bound for Japan to do so since attacks on Iran heightened tensions in the region and effectively disrupted maritime traffic.

Japan’s Golden Week holiday period got fully underway on April 29, drawing large crowds to major tourist destinations and airports, where long lines formed as overseas travel surged.

A series of sightings involving unusually large brown bears in Hokkaido has heightened concerns among local residents, with one 330-kilogram animal captured in Tomamae and another 280-kilogram bear attacking a hunter in Shimamaki.

Full-scale Golden Week travel began on April 29, with Chubu Centrair International Airport experiencing its busiest outbound travel day of the holiday period. The airport was crowded from the morning with vacationers heading overseas.

Electricity and gas bills for usage in May will rise slightly in Japan, with the impact of tensions involving Iran expected to appear in utility charges from June onward. Larger increases could follow in subsequent months.

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