Etymology

Freeter

A Japanese magazine coined it by fusing English “free” with German “Arbeiter.”

Japanese · 1987
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English
free + German Arbeiter
Japanese
furii arubaita
furiitaa (フリーター)

In 1987, an editor at From A, a Japanese part-time job magazine, combined the English word "free" with the German word Arbeiter, meaning worker, and produced furiitaa. The term described young people who chose part-time work over the lifetime employment track that defined the postwar Japanese labor market.1

German had entered Japanese academic vocabulary before World War II, especially in science and medicine. The word arubaito, from the German Arbeit, had long been the standard Japanese term for part-time work. The new coinage layered English freedom onto German labor.2

During the bubble economy of the late 1980s, freeters were seen as people pursuing their dreams, rejecting the rigid corporate path for flexibility and personal time. Television programs romanticized the lifestyle.3

When the bubble burst in the early 1990s, the meaning reversed. Companies halted graduate hiring. The number of freeters rose from fewer than one million in 1990 to over four million by 2001.4 What had been a choice became, for many, the only option.

4,000,000
Freeters in Japan by 2001, up from fewer than one million in 1990

The Japanese Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare defines freeters as individuals between fifteen and thirty-four who are employed as part-time or temporary workers, are seeking such work, or are unemployed but not enrolled in school and not performing housework.5

Japanese companies prefer to hire fresh graduates, treating new employees as lifetime investments. A person who spends several years as a freeter faces diminishing prospects of entering the regular employment system. The longer someone remains outside, the harder re-entry becomes.6

The pension system compounds the problem. Japanese pensions are calculated based on years of contributions. Freeters accumulate little or no pension coverage, a condition that may force them to continue working past retirement age in a country where the population over sixty-five already exceeds 29 percent.7

1987
The part-time job magazine From A coins “furiitaa” during the peak of Japan’s bubble economy.
Early 1990s
Japan’s economic bubble bursts. Companies stop hiring graduates for lifetime positions.
2001
Freeter numbers exceed four million. The term shifts from aspiration to stigma.
1 Yuji Genda, "Freeters (Permanent Part-Timers)," in The Wiley Blackwell Encyclopedia of Social Theory (Wiley, 2016).
2 Genda, "Freeters."
3 Mary C. Brinton, Lost in Transition: Youth, Work, and Instability in Postindustrial Japan (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2011).
4 Japan Experience, "Freeter in Japan: between freedom and precariousness," japan-experience.com.
5 Japanese Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare, "Youth Employment Measures," mhlw.go.jp.
6 Brinton, Lost in Transition.
7 Reiko Kosugi, "The Transition from School to Work in Japan: Understanding the Increase in Freeter and Jobless Youth," Japan Labor Review 1, no. 1 (2004).
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