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JAPAN
4.5
based on 4 Reviews
About JAPAN
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JAPAN Ratings
based on 4 reviews
Overall Rating
4.5/5
How AmbitionBox ratings work?
5
3
4
1
3
0
2
0
1
0
Category Ratings
5.0
Work-life balance
5.0
Work satisfaction
4.1
Job security
4.1
Skill development
4.1
Promotions
3.2
Company culture
3.2
Salary
JAPAN is rated 4.5 out of 5 stars on AmbitionBox, based on 4 company reviews. This rating reflects a generally positive employee experience, indicating satisfaction with the company’s work culture, benefits, and career growth opportunities. AmbitionBox gathers authentic employee reviews and ratings, making it a trusted platform for job seekers and employees in India.
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Compare JAPAN with Similar Companies
Change Company | Change Company | Change Company | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Overall Rating | 4.5/5 based on 4 reviews | 4.4/5 based on 364 reviews | 4.2/5 based on 1.2k reviews | 3.4/5 based on 10 reviews |
Highly Rated for | Work-life balance Work satisfaction Skill development | Company culture Skill development Work-life balance | Company culture Work-life balance Skill development | Salary Job security |
Critically Rated for | Salary Company culture | No critically rated category | No critically rated category | Work satisfaction |
Primary Work Policy | - | Work from office 69% employees reported | Work from office 67% employees reported | - |
Rating by Women Employees | - no rating available | 4.5 Good rated by 35 women | 4.0 Good rated by 123 women | 5.0 Excellent rated by 1 women |
Rating by Men Employees | - no rating available | 4.4 Good rated by 265 men | 4.3 Good rated by 1k men | 1.9 Bad rated by 6 men |
Job security | 4.1 Good | 4.1 Good | 4.0 Good | 4.2 Good |
View more
JAPAN Salaries
JAPAN salaries have received with an average score of 3.2 out of 5 by 4 employees.
Sales Staff
(3 salaries)
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₹0.1 L/yr - ₹0.1 L/yr
Project Manager
(1 salaries)
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₹47.5 L/yr - ₹52.5 L/yr
Project Engineer
(1 salaries)
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₹3.6 L/yr - ₹4.6 L/yr
Technical Lead
(1 salaries)
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₹21.6 L/yr - ₹27.6 L/yr
Software Engineer
(1 salaries)
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₹13.5 L/yr - ₹17.2 L/yr
Software Developer
(1 salaries)
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₹19.8 L/yr - ₹25.3 L/yr
Principal
(1 salaries)
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₹13.5 L/yr - ₹17.2 L/yr
Commis Chef
(1 salaries)
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₹1.8 L/yr - ₹2.3 L/yr
Housekeeping Manager
(1 salaries)
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₹3.2 L/yr - ₹4.1 L/yr
Indian Chef
(1 salaries)
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₹0.6 L/yr - ₹0.8 L/yr
JAPAN News
Trump's 25% tariffs on all steel, aluminium imports go into effect
- Trump removed all exemptions from his 2018 tariffs on steel and aluminium, increasing the tariffs on aluminium from 10%.
- This move is part of disrupting global commerce, with plans to tax imports from EU, Brazil, and South Korea reciprocally.
- The EU countered with measures worth 26 billion euros in response to US tariffs worth 28 billion dollars.
- Canada, the largest steel and aluminium supplier to the US, introduced countermeasures amounting to Canadian $29.8 billion.
- Trump believes that higher tariff rates will lead to companies investing in US factories and creating jobs.
- The president's tariffs aim to influence companies to establish factories in the US, with incentives for job creation.
- While steel and aluminium industries benefit from tariffs, downstream manufacturers using these materials face higher costs.
- The overall impact of tariffs is a decrease in production for downstream companies, exceeding the benefits to steel and aluminium industries.
- Economists warn that increased prices due to tariffs could lead to reduced sales and lower profits, impacting investment decisions in new facilities.
- Top steel exporters to the US include Canada, Mexico, Brazil, South Korea, and Japan, with China accounting for a small fraction.
HinduBusinessLine | 12 Mar, 2025
Japan Seeks Exemption From Trump’s Reciprocal Trade Tariffs
- Japan has asked to be exempted from the reciprocal tariffs planned by Donald Trump.
- Foreign Minister Takeshi Iwaya met with US Secretary of State Marco Rubio and requested exemption from the tariffs.
- Japan also raised the issue of automobile tariffs and sought exclusion from the 25% tariff on imported steel and aluminum.
- The Japanese government has started communication with Washington regarding tariff matters.
Bloomberg Quint | 16 Feb, 2025

Japan seeks exemption from Trump’s reciprocal trade tariffs
- Japan seeks exemption from Trump’s reciprocal trade tariffs.
- Foreign Minister Takeshi Iwaya requested the exclusion from the tariffs during a meeting with US Secretary of State Marco Rubio.
- Iwaya also raised the issue of automobile tariffs and sought exclusion from the 25% tariff on imported steel and aluminum products.
- The Japanese government is in communication with the US over tariff matters.
HinduBusinessLine | 16 Feb, 2025
US and UK refuse to sign Paris summit declaration on ‘inclusive’ AI
- The US and UK have refused to sign a declaration on “inclusive and sustainable” artificial intelligence at a landmark Paris summit.
- The document was backed by 60 other signatories, including France, China, India, Japan, Australia and Canada.
- The UK prime minister’s spokesperson said they only sign initiatives that are in UK national interests.
- The US and UK did not immediately explain their reasons for refusing to sign.
- The US vice-president criticised Europe’s “excessive regulation” of technology and warned against cooperating with China.
- Labour MP said that the UK’s decision risked damaging its reputation in AI innovation.
- Campaign groups also criticised the UK’s decision and urged for bolder government action on AI-generated misinformation.
- The declaration was not strong enough on security and did not reflect the UK's approach and therefore rejected.
- US VP called for international regulatory regimes to foster AI technology rather than to strangle it.
- The Chinese vice-premier, Zhang Guoqing, was present when JD Vance referred to the risks of partnering with “authoritarian” regimes.
Guardian | 11 Feb, 2025
‘Bring me my tariffs’: how Trump’s China plan was 40 years in the making
- Trump’s tariffs have been panned by economists, who warn that they increase inflation and hurt farmers and middle-class households.
- An American finance professor, Michael Pettis, has influenced both the Trump and Biden administrations with his views on China's excess savings and overcapacity, which are externalised into exports dubbed as 'dumped' on to the rest of the world.
- Popular opinion on China has steadily soured since the 2000s, with anti-China policies being a rare point of bipartisan consensus. By late 2019, the average tariff rate reached 21%. Biden expanded Chinese duties aimed at electric vehicles, silicon chips and lithium batteries.
- Trump's tariffs are a centrepiece of both his domestic and foreign agenda. He has been consistent on tariffs for the last 40 years.
- The Japanese economic miracle and their durable goods were despised by Trump. The rise of Japan was the foundation of his views on China and proved to have massive consequences.
- The efforts to promote domestic consumption would come at the cost of industrial investment. China used the markets of the US to subsidise their own growth.
- As the centre of Asian economic dynamism has shifted to China, so has the target of Trump’s ire.
- We are living through a collision of economic trajectories set in motion 40 years ago: Xi Jinping’s attachment to export-driven industrialisation, pitted against Trump’s decades-long fixation on protectionist tariffs.
- North America and the EU are being left behind, as China builds an alternative trade infrastructure through free trade agreements, excluding North America and Europe.
- Trump's tariffs have helped shape the world
Guardian | 6 Feb, 2025
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JAPAN FAQs
What are the pros and cons of working in JAPAN?
Working at JAPAN comes with several advantages and disadvantages. It is highly rated for work life balance, work satisfaction and job security. However, it is poorly rated for salary & benefits and company culture, based on 4 employee reviews on AmbitionBox.
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