Tomoko Yoshino |
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Born | 1965 or 1966 (age 58–59) |
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Occupation | Labor union leader |
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Known for | President of RENGO |
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Tomoko Yoshino (芳野友子) is the first female president of RENGO, Japan's largest labor organization.[1][2] In her role at RENGO, she has worked to reduce gender gaps in the Japanese workforce.[1]
Yoshino is also one of a council responsible for implementing prime minister Fumio Kishida's trickle-down "new capitalism" economic policies aimed at addressing income inequality.[1][3][4][5][6]
Career
After high school, Yoshino started working at Juki, a company that makes sewing machines, in 1984.[1][2] She joined the Japanese Association of Metal, Machinery, and Manufacturing Workers (JAM), a manufacturing union.[1][2]
In 2015, she became vice president of the labor union federation RENGO and deputy head of JAM.[2]
On 6 October 2021 she was promoted to president of RENGO, making her the first female president in the organization's history and the first RENGO president to come from JAM.[2][7] She was chosen for a two-year term.[2] According to Yoshino, some of her male colleagues encouraged her not to take the job because "it was too difficult for a woman to handle the job in such a difficult time".[8] However, many women in RENGO supported her promotion as a sign of progress.[8] Yoshino said of her decision to accept the role: "I made up my mind that I should never miss a chance to break the glass ceiling by myself".[8]
In her role as chief of RENGO, Yoshino's goals include improving gender equality and diversity as well as supporting casual workers.[1][3]
References