In February and March of this year, 40% of
teleworkers were required to come to work.
This is the result of a survey conducted by
the CFO Association of Japan titled "The Impact of the New Coronavirus on
Accounting and Financial Operations of Japanese Companies".
The survey was conducted online in March
and April of this year. Responses were obtained from 577 CFOs and accounting
and finance executives at companies.
In February and March of this year, 7% of
respondents answered that they had a period of compulsory telework, 34%
answered that they had not enforced it but strongly recommended it, and 25%
answered that they neither enforced it nor recommended it.
The percentage of respondents who were
required to come to work during the telecommuting period amounted to 41%. The
reasons cited were processing paper documents, attending meetings, and
participating in meetings.
A total of 96% of the respondents thought
that telecommuting would be necessary in the future during emergencies such as
earthquakes.
When asked what the bottlenecks were at the
time of implementation, the most common answer was "system
constraints" at 50%, followed by "going to work for meetings with
other departments" at 37%.
These materials and the information contained herein are provided by Office Tomisaka and are intended to provide general information on a particular subjects and are not an exhaustive treatment of such subjects.

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