The industry of the Anime It is again under public scrutiny. This time, not because of a creative controversy or conflicts between fans, but because of possible violations of the law. Japan Fair Trade Commission published a OFFICIAL REPORT that exposes systematic business practices that could be illegal. The document indicates non-existent or late contracts, unpaid work, constant financial pressure and the forced assignment of copyright. Although these problems have been normalizing for years, the report marks a breaking point.
For the first time, a government entity recognizes that the current model of anime production could be based on structural abuse.
Late contracts that leave anime studios unprotected

To begin with, the research reveals an alarming practice. Many studies start working without a signed contract. that is, they produce Anime No clear payment guarantees or defined conditions. Nearly half of the main studies did not receive a written contract before starting production. In some cases, the document arrived when the work was already finished.
As a result, anime studios are trapped. They already invested money. They already compromised staff. Therefore, they accept unfavorable terms to be able to collect. This dynamic places them in an extremely weak position in front of the Production Committees. According to the Commission, this behavior could constitute an abuse of a dominant position, since the law requires that the contracts be delivered from the beginning of the order.
More work more demands and less money in the production of the anime

The report also dismantles a widespread idea. The Anime It lives a global boom, but studies do not benefit from that success. Although production rates have increased over time, most studies continue to trade with losses. The reason is clear. Quality demands skyrocketed. The series now require almost cinematic animation. In addition, the calendars are constantly extended. And yet, the budgets do not fit.
To this is added an even more serious problem. The extra work is almost never paid. Re-works, creative changes and delays are common. However, very few anime studios receive full compensation for that extra effort. In many cases, they receive nothing. Committees typically classify subjective changes as bug fixes. In this way, they transfer the cost to the studios. This practice not only affects profitability. It also erodes the stability of the entire industry.
Freelancers, subcontractors and copyrights at risk

the pressure of the Anime It does not stay in the main studies. goes down the entire production chain. The subcontractors They suffer delays in payments. Some even face unilateral cuts after handing over the job. Although rates have gone up slightly, many still lose money and have no room to trade.
The freelancers They are in the most vulnerable situation. represent more than half of the workforce of the Anime. Still, many work without written contracts. Others receive the conditions when the project is finished. This opens the door to urgent orders without extra payment, constant changes and unpaid hours of work. The dissatisfaction is widespread. Income does not grow at the rate of cost of living.
In addition, the report focuses on copyright. Most of the studies assign all intellectual property to the Production Committee. In theory, they receive a payment. In practice, that payment is usually diluted within the base budget. If that budget barely covers costs, the assignment occurs without real compensation. The Commission warns that this practice could also be illegal.