Top 4 Persistent Illusions about the 25-Year-Long Recession (Notes from Under the Tatami Mats–14 … My Adventures in Japan)

in #japan6 years ago (edited)

“All the hot springs in Japan will freeze over before Japan changes its immigration policy.”

Apart from the above comments, there’s really not much left to be said about the moribund Japanese economy. So, we’ll look at its society instead.    

You're not getting older ... you're "super-aging"

Japan’s is the one society in the world that is referred to as “super-aging.” And recently, its low birth rate, which plummeted for most of the final 5 decades of the 20th century, has been compounded by a dropping fertility rate.

To make matters even worse, all the baby boomers are now surpassing the 65-year mark, and there are fewer and fewer young people to support them.

Which spells more doom for the economy.     (Image source)

Slipping into oblivion

In response, the nation’s leaders could look to Singapore or Canada to see how a society can accept many foreigners to live and work in the country, while still remaining a strong, cohesive society. But all the hot springs in Japan will freeze over before they let that happen. 

Instead, the economy will continue to deteriorate and disintegrate, until it slips quietly and inexorably into the Pacific Ocean (to paraphrase Egon von Greyerz).       (Image source)

   Introduction to – “Notes from Under the Tatami Mats”  (right-click on title)

Top 5 Expropriated Islands that Should Be Returned to the Original Inhabitants
Top 4 Brilliantly Novel Uses of Concrete, Concrete, and More Concrete
Top 3 Ineffective Anti-Terrorism Measures
... and more

Links to my Other Series …

      Introduction – "Intro to Vocab-ability"   (right-click on title)
      Guide – "Guide to Entries"   (right-click on title)
      Index– "Index" to all Chapters and Sections   (right-click on title)

      Lou Reed – "Anthology of Memorable Lyrics, Part 1"   (right-click on title)
      Lou Reed – "Anthology of Memorable Lyrics, Part 2"   (right-click on title)

Images sourced from Google Images, unless otherwise indicated or unless my own.
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Very great analysis here @majes.tytyty. Japan ought to open its borders to accommodate foreigners to drive it. But I guess they are reluctant because they are a conservative society.

PS: I saw that this round was well booked. Glad you caught the right train, at the right time, for for the right reason.

Thanks. It's not only that Japan is conservative; it's that it was closed off from external influence for 200 years, and that resulted in the country being more ethnocentric than most other countries.

Yes, there was a long line-up at the "ticket booth," but I squeezed my way thru just in time.

Hahaha a good squeeze, it was. Well done sir. Good to learn this incredible fact about Japan. I didn't know that the border closure lasted for two whopping centuries.

Yep, that was the heyday of the Samurai. The emperor remained the figurehead, but the samurai controlled their various domains, and, by extension, the entire country.

During those 2 centuries, no Japanese were allowed to go abroad. And only a few foreigners (mostly Dutch, and I believe some Portuguese) were allowed to alight onto one tiny Japanese island near Nagasaki.

Finally, in 1853-54, the US sent a "diplomatic / military" expedition (read "THREATENING MILITARY) to Japan in order to force the country to open. It did.

(If the US action sounds familiar, that's because it has become familiar. All too familiar for many countries.)

These are quite interesting revelations. While the US approach is a gunboat diplomacy, at least it opened Japan.

wow, this is captivating @majes.tytyty
am thinking of opting in for a tour in the near future
thank you for sharing and stay blessed

Go if and when you can. After the past 25 years of deflation, a trip through Japan can be quite affordable for virtually anyone.

Life is waving through time. There are times where many children are born and other times where there are few births. The impact on the economy can be felt so many years later. And not only in Japan.

I believe the issue lies in the way the Japanese approach life. I heard there is a certain unwritten rule in Japan, where a man is supposed to get a regular job after he completes his graduation and failing to get a job will result in him being considered as a failure. Troubled young men find in very tough to get a steady, well paid job, nowadays in Japan

Moreover with women entering the workforce, it becomes extremely difficult for men to find work. In Japan, Men have traditionally been bread winners and have taken care of the family, lack of steady jobs will change the mindset of men to go against marriage as they and their partners wont be able to run the family.

I think the population of Japan is shrinking because of economic insecurity. Most of the people of Japan do irregular jobs, they work in multiple part time jobs where there are low wages and less benefits.

Japanese culture gives importance to men as breadwinners , and with unstable jobs and economic insecurity, they are not considered eligible for marriage and even if there are couples with irregular jobs willing to get married, their parents will not allow then to do so.

In this country, hard work and long hours are an accepted trend.It is even considered rude to leave work before your superiors leave. People who usually crib about long hours do not get sympathy from their close ones.

As such Japanese men are totally stressed and harldy find time to meet women. I also read somehwere that the women there are always complaining about not able to find a suitable match and hence are looking for an alliance in other countries.

In a deteriorating economy and with the workcorce getting less, there should be changes made to the immigration laws and people from other countries should be allowed to work in Japan.

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