Thursday, August 19, 2010

Marketing Japan: Japan is Headed for Third World Status

By Mike in Tokyo Rogers

The big news is about Japan's public debt. Even the older Japanese people have become worried. This has led to many problems that include poor old people not reporting to the government that relatives have died so that they can continue to collect on government pensions. I wrote about that here.


This problem with spiraling public debt in Japan is nothing new, but what is new is the perception of the Japanese themselves. There seems to be a growing realization among the average Japanese that serious trouble is around the corner and that preparations must be made.

I knew that something had seriously changed the day that my father-in-law asked me where he could buy physical gold! This from a very conservative Japanese government supporting former company president. I recommended buying gold in Tokyo from here.

From the recent news, and things that I am seeing with my own eyes, I am getting the impression that people here are getting nervous. Considering Japanese politics and how they are consistently in a state of inertia (except when it comes to spending money, raising taxes or sending our "defense forces" off to somewhere halfway around the world) then I think we are in big trouble and I think it is coming soon.

One thing that really set off this train of thinking in my mind was a visit to Shibuya the other day. It was the first time I had been to Shibuya in quite a while. I had to wait for a business associate in front of the station. Oh, how things have changed in Shibuya over these last 30 years.

I looked out across from the police box in front of the station at Hachiko and then it dawned on me: Urban decay. The place was starting to fall apart. It was dirty, the tiles on the street were crumbling and in need of repair, there was trash on the streets, and it was the kind of dirty that reminded me of downtown Los Angeles.

Forgive my rose-colored glasses, but Japan is not supposed to look like downtown Los Angeles or Thailand or Hong Kong...

No disrespect for Thailand or Hong Kong, I love those places, but looking out from in front of Shibuya
station, I couldn't tell if I were in Japan or some south eastern asian country! This might not seem a shock to you, but remember that this is the #2 or #3 economy in the world... It should not look at all like some broken down third-world nation.

I wrote in 2005 how America had become a third-world nation. It was the #2 most read article for the entire year on Lew Rockwell... It got me a ton of hate mail and even death threats...

No one complains about that article anymore. It is a given. Japan is now definitely headed in that direction. Unfortunately, I think that is a given also.

Tiles on the sidewalk to help the seeing impaired - this is what they are supposed to look like. 
The ones I saw were crumbling, ripped up and completely missing in some places.

The kicker for me was the tiles placed on the ground for the sight-impaired. They were ripped up and - not just in need of repair - they all needed to be completely replaced!

Notwithstanding my basic policy of being against any government spending for anything (especially social welfare or the mlitary); I did not make policy in this country. The policy has created a huge government bureaucracy and a social welfare system. It was designed to bloat the government but also to take care of the unfortunate and down-trodden.... If that is the policy, then what kind of a country doesn't have to money to take care of the most basic needs of the most unfortunate among us? What are we taxed to death for?

And this situation was painfully visible in Shibuya no less. Shibuya!? One of the most famous shopping and entertainment districts in the world for young people. A name synonymous with fun, shopping, spending and fashion... and it now looks like a rundown dump.

Here's an article from the Australian newspaper that supports what I say, though on a bigger scale.

Economists will blame the deflation trap and misguided fiscal spending. Political analysts will blame parliamentary deadlock and vested interests. Investors will blame over-engineering and timidity. The simpler version is that Japan has ceded its status as the world's second-biggest economy to China because it lost interest in keeping it. The farcical domino-run of six prime ministers in five years marked a haemorrhaging of national gravitas that few other electorates would tolerate. Even if Japan as a whole were hungry enough to give China a battle for the second-place spot, it has nobody willing to channel that energy.

Japan! How could this have happened?

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Keywords: marketing Japan, Third World, Shibuya, Mike Rogers, deflation, Mike in Tokyo Rogers,

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