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What is the pension treatment after emigrating to Japan?

# Japanese Immigrants # Introduction Japan is not only a country with beautiful scenery, but also a country close to China, so many people choose to immigrate to Japan in the past two years. Let children receive a better education, and at the same time plan for their future pension. So what benefits can Japanese immigrants enjoy after retirement? Don't!

In Japan, when a person enters the 65-year-old mark, what pension services can he enjoy from the government?

First of all, the Japanese government will give him a sum of 200,000 yen (about 65,438+2,000 yuan) for the renovation of his personal residence to create an environment suitable for the elderly. For example, hand protectors should be installed in all parts of the home, toilets should be properly modified, and special bathtubs for the elderly should be added. , you can go to the local city government for reimbursement. This is a special welfare provided by Japan for everyone over 65 years old.

Secondly, the elderly buy 90% of the cost of wheelchairs, crutches and nursing beds. All of them are borne by the government, and individuals only need to bear 10%. The government also gives 654.38+million yen to the elderly every year, equivalent to 6,000 yuan, to buy nursing products such as diapers for the elderly.

Third, the Japanese government will evaluate your nursing level according to your physical health, and then pay you different amounts of nursing insurance premiums according to different levels, ranging from 50,000 yen, about 3,000 yuan to 6,543,800 yen, equivalent to 6,543,800 yuan.

What's this money for? It is to invite professional nurses to come home to help you bathe, clean, massage and even cook. Or twice a week, drive the elderly with mobility difficulties to a nearby nursing home, take a hot spring bath, have lunch, take a nap, then chat with old friends and drive you home at night.

For the widowed elderly, Japanese local governments also have a special "safety confirmation system", that is, they should always know their health status, whether they are still alive and what they need.

Then this confirmation system is implemented by the government in contact with public institutions or enterprises. For example, meter readers of power companies, water supply companies and gas companies, couriers of express companies and post offices, as well as newsboys of various newspapers and so on. If you find that the newspaper you ordered has not been collected for many days and the light has been on during the day, you must report it to the designated government department to prevent the whereabouts of the old man from being unknown after the accident.

There is also a kind of service for the elderly, that is, the government sends box lunches to the lonely elderly through subsidies. These lunches are provided by the nearby 24-hour convenience store. Because lunch boxes need to be delivered for three meals a day, the lunch box delivery clerk becomes the health supervisor of the old people, who is responsible for filling out the situation report of the old people every day and reporting it to the local municipal government, which pays a sum of money to the 24-hour convenience store as a reward.

Many cities in Japan provide some special services for the elderly. For example, downtown Osaka distributes plastic sealed bottles to the elderly in its jurisdiction. Two forms are filled in the bottle, one is the contact information of family members in case of accident, and the other is the first aid information card, which contains important first aid information such as the health insurance number, blood type, disease and drugs being taken by the elderly.

After the two forms are put into the sealed bottle, the storage compartment on the refrigerator door is uniformly designated, and a reminder board is posted outside the refrigerator door. Once the elderly living alone have an accident, as long as they can call the emergency number. Emergency workers don't need to ask too many questions after they come to the door. As long as they find this sealed bottle, they can help the elderly.

Therefore, in Japan, the life of the elderly is fully guaranteed by the "three-island pass" of national pension, medical insurance and nursing insurance. It is precisely because Japan's home-based care system and government aid policies are very complete that more than 70% of the elderly in Japan choose home-based care.

It is precisely because of the serious aging in Japan that Japan's pension system can be said to be very perfect and humanized. There will be no No Country for Old Men in Japan, and there is no need to raise children for old age. The government's pension benefits are enough for the elderly to spend their old age independently of their children.