Why is Japan stuck in the past?

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  • Опубликовано: 19 июн 2024
  • Subscribe: / uptin Japan's economy is barely growing for the past few decades. But why is one of the world's largest economies so stagnant?
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Комментарии • 1,2 тыс.

  • @dunnowy123
    @dunnowy123 11 месяцев назад +363

    Having visited Japan, my impression is that they'd rather be behind and have a declining population than not be Japanese. The things that we take for granted, for example like taking care of physical goods (i.e. using for phone until it breaks, taking care of electronics) or homogenity (i.e. low crime rate, cohesive well run society) are things the Western world kind of looks down upon but to them represent positive values.
    It's something truly special to walk around. A city is largest Tokyo or Osaka and not see a single piece of garbage anywhere. In fact, the only people I saw who littered were foreigners and it kind of made me realize why the Japanese are so hostile to the idea of mass immigration to be honest with you.

    • @user-lv9pr9or2h
      @user-lv9pr9or2h 11 месяцев назад +1

      フランス、スェーデン、イギリスは移民問題で頭を抱えているでしょ。
      マナーが良い外国人なら歓迎するのだけど、やっぱり怖いよ。
      既に4000人の外国人が日本で行方不明になってます。
      違法薬物も、毎年摘発される量が増えてる。
      この配信者も、わざわざ日本に来て日本をネタに配信するユーチューバーなんだよね。かなり迷惑。
      自分の国の問題を解決したら?と思うよ。

    • @PK-nb9ph
      @PK-nb9ph 11 месяцев назад +43

      Clean? Osaka? Guess you have not been walking around too much ..😵‍💫

    • @sharonsmall1940
      @sharonsmall1940 11 месяцев назад +6

      I love visiting Japan. I guess it doesn’t pay to be clean, polite, appreciation of culture, and love of its people and country. Why is it I wish my own country had those attributes.

    • @shehranazim4784
      @shehranazim4784 11 месяцев назад +29

      I won't argue that, in general, Japan is cleaner than most other first world nations, but it is, by no measure spotless. I help run a trash pickup volunteering event in Nagoya every month, and we end up picking up around 50-100 kg of trash within just an hour of walking around the city centre. The state of some of the areas in the city are unbelievably bad.
      Also, Japan is hyper consumerist. Visit any second hand store, and you'll see the shelves stacked with year old iPhones and the like. Having worked in the automotive industry here, I've also seen, first hand, how people will trade in slightly old cars to buy brand new ones in droves. The older generation, for sure, follow the principle of "use it until it can't be used", but the current generation here is no different to the UK or US (with the added benefit of stable career progression and a decent social safety net enabling this).
      As for "homogeneity" enabling a low crime rate? I mean, come on - are you saying that anywhere with slight diversity in the population will immediately devolve into chaos and bedlam? As a British-Bangladeshi, I'm not, at least at a visual glance, the "right kind" of expat, but I'm here as a highly skilled individual (on the same visa he mentions in the video) who pays taxes, helps the community by volunteering in many ways, learned the language so I could be more involved in said community and understand the culture. The same applies to my international community here, and also to my South Asian community in my hometown in the UK.

    • @kcjfilms2946
      @kcjfilms2946 11 месяцев назад +16

      So Ive lived in Japan for more than 10 years and most crime is done by older Japanese men or younger teens. Fact

  • @kiwilemons737
    @kiwilemons737 Год назад +34

    It's funny how they want to blame young people but don't give them the space to experiment and grow.

    • @Kushenable
      @Kushenable 11 месяцев назад +4

      its always the youngest gen who is screwing it up xD. they always will shoot down on the newest gen

    • @understone86
      @understone86 11 месяцев назад

      If they would give a chance to the real young talents of Japan what would happen to the old fart leaders corrupt political and relational network? They wont get any chance... period

  • @li_tsz_fung
    @li_tsz_fung 11 месяцев назад +195

    When I went to Japan , I feel like a lot of things there are a lot older than I would expected, but still function as good or better than the things we have back home.

    • @anonygrazer3234
      @anonygrazer3234 11 месяцев назад +27

      They don't have "built in obsolescence" like the rest of the world; goods are made to last a lifetime even still.

    • @sentiasatransformasi
      @sentiasatransformasi 11 месяцев назад +20

      they all look well maintained too. in my country, even new stuff like new traffic lights or roads will look old in 2 years

    • @darcyperkins7041
      @darcyperkins7041 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@anonygrazer3234 Except for new houses.

    • @anonygrazer3234
      @anonygrazer3234 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@darcyperkins7041 Yeah, I imagine it wouldn't hold true about modern houses. I've watched YT vids of refurbishing old wooden houses in Japan & the craftsmanship is just incredible.

    • @ghajik.
      @ghajik. 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@anonygrazer3234 That and their corporate structure are the reason for their downfall.

  • @trustme2001
    @trustme2001 11 месяцев назад +240

    I would still rather live in Japan than the United States or in China. Japan is still a beautiful country And there's still ahead especially in infrastructure than many developing countries.

    • @Kushenable
      @Kushenable 11 месяцев назад

      usa and china are both the worst countrys on this planet... it isnt hard to be better than them... even in africa urban it is way better than usa or china^^

    • @hurrikkkanes2533
      @hurrikkkanes2533 11 месяцев назад +50

      cope and seethe weird weeaboo 😂 tokyo is not even comparable to 2nd tier cities in china lmao

    • @trustme2001
      @trustme2001 11 месяцев назад

      @@hurrikkkanes2533 you on crack. Japan has been developed, China barely left their tents like 10 years ago. And you think you're hard.

    • @stephenbachmann1171
      @stephenbachmann1171 11 месяцев назад +75

      @@hurrikkkanes2533 Tokyo is safe, clean and food is nice. Go get your daily serving of gutter oil.

    • @hurrikkkanes2533
      @hurrikkkanes2533 11 месяцев назад +40

      @@stephenbachmann1171 sure 🤣🤣🤣 no zombi workers on streets, no minors getting forced to go to love hotels 🥰🥰🥰 hey, why do iphones in japan have mandatory shutter sounds? 💀💀💀

  • @kaunas88
    @kaunas88 11 месяцев назад +19

    People confuse a big economy with a prosperous economy. The Indian economy is much much bigger than Luxembourg, but which is richer?

    • @sreevishva3416
      @sreevishva3416 11 месяцев назад +2

      Yeah India has been a developing country for year and I don't think it will ever develop...

    • @srikrishnak196
      @srikrishnak196 10 месяцев назад +1

      India still innovates a lot tho. But yes Luxembourg is richer in terms of per capita

    • @srikrishnak196
      @srikrishnak196 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@sreevishva3416It will dont worry. India is not a homogeneous country. Already southern states have reached high HDI like that of philippines and vietnam and more rich economies,only population has to decrease a lot overall

  • @Jackknowshow
    @Jackknowshow Год назад +127

    I don’t think this get said enough: lots of ppl appreciate the kind of contents on RUclips that just dives into a topic straight away. I ve watched so many informative videos that just goes around and around talking about the background and doesn’t even get into the topic of the video halfway through. Keep it up Uptin!

    • @jahonwong7259
      @jahonwong7259 11 месяцев назад +3

      I think there are so many aspects to analysis the conservative social environment(including invisable classic system,lifetime employment,extreme polite rules).
      In my view,it's mainly related with geography and history.They westernized about 100y ago but never had the mind revolution that respect human right and creativety.

    • @uptin
      @uptin  11 месяцев назад +8

      Thanks for your kind words! This is why I do this

    • @darcyperkins7041
      @darcyperkins7041 11 месяцев назад

      Someone once described it as a Japanese cultural core with a Western veneer globbed all over it.

    • @mingyuhuang8944
      @mingyuhuang8944 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@jahonwong7259Modern Japan is a 3rd world country.
      Socially, and politically, it is by all means a 3rd world country.
      The Japanese can look good and be a great nation capable of achieving the impossible... But too often it disappoints shamefully...
      Japanese people have stagnant minds. It is a curse upon their society and an insult to the high potential of their people which they are not achieving
      I'm sure the more politicians preach and beg everyone to do something, they'll definitely do it, because that's definitely how human function. If you hadn't picked up on the blasting sarcasm, then wipe yourself off because you are dead.
      Do these people not realize for something to happen, you have to have a causation and the removal of blockers? Like for example a totally revamped education system, a better workforce union, no overwork, mandatory national service for men and women etc... Etc...❤

    • @xapaga1
      @xapaga1 9 месяцев назад

      ​@@darcyperkins7041
      The idea (or should I say ideology) of 和魂洋才 / _Wakon Yōsai_ , which means "Japanese mindset plus Western talent" has been there for a century and a half, actually. It's been a driving force for Japan's remarkable success, but its psychological discrepancies lead to the ever increasing cases of depressive disorder and suicides.

  • @hariranormal5584
    @hariranormal5584 Год назад +187

    The basic summary is: They have potential. They have made VERY nice things starting out, however, they are resisting change. They are "happy with what they have and think we need no further developments". but, the modern world obviously is changing (for the better or worse who knows), and they are left behind

    • @animeboi6503
      @animeboi6503 Год назад +26

      I feel that the video missed some things though. While Japanese companies aren't as prevalent or household names like they used to, it's because many have pivoted to selling components and equipments used to build products that many still use. Many apple suppliers are Japanese companies and about 30% of Boeing components are made by japanese companies. People also tend to look at Japan in a vacuum when the fact of the matter is that almost all east Asian economies followed Japan's economic model and is facing similar challenges as a result. And the fact that some part and companies resisting change is not exclusive to Japan as companies in Germany also face this issue of many smaller firms simply refusing to modernize

    • @oceanwave4502
      @oceanwave4502 11 месяцев назад +5

      @@animeboi6503 I beg difference. Japan increasingly loses out in many things, from software, to smartphone, to cloud computing, to quatum computing, to satellite communication, to 5G, to NEV (New Energy Vehicle), to Metaverse-like products, to AI. Japan mostly clings to their past glory: Xbox for entertainment, Toyota/Honda for cars, Anime/Manga. Those inventions, of course, won't save Japan forever.

    • @ElTigre12024
      @ElTigre12024 11 месяцев назад +4

      @@oceanwave4502box is made by Microsoft which isn’t a Japanese company. Fair point otherwise.

    • @animeboi6503
      @animeboi6503 11 месяцев назад +9

      @@oceanwave4502 as I've said before, Japanese companies have pivoted to selling equipment and components that require their years of expertise and you'd be pretty surprised at how much Japanese components are in everyday objects. This argument that Japan is stuck in the past with their galapagos design and whatnot was only really true for a small period of time in the latter half of the 2010s when most countries have embraced digitalization while Japan is seemingly lagging behind. With the pandemic really forcing many Japanese companies to somewhat adapt to digitalization. People seemed to fixated on news about how Japan finally banned floppy disc or how flip phones are still widely used in Japan to further this idea that Japan is somehow backwards when they are still one of the biggest spenders in terms of R&D and the fact that the second modt power supercomputer in the world is located in Japan as one example of their technical prowess

    • @animeboi6503
      @animeboi6503 11 месяцев назад +9

      @@oceanwave4502 The problem with how people view Japan is that they tend to look at Japan in a vacuum like what happened to Japan is somehow an isolated case specific to Japan. What people missed however is the fact that pretty much every east asian nation saw what Japan was doing in the 80s and copied it down to a t. To quote Einstein, "the definition of insanity is doing the same ting over and over again while expecting a different result". Other east asian countries are experiencing rapid growth like Japan did in the 80s and are now facing similar issue with stagnation and depopulation looming over many of them. Problems like firms not embracing digitalization is also not exclusive to Japan. Considering that countries like Korea is run by a few megacorp that stifles innovation, china is well china, and Taiwan is really just a manufacturing hub, I feel that out of all the east asian countries Japan probably has the best future out of all of them

  • @SoraFan23
    @SoraFan23 Год назад +150

    Not just Japan but some other countries are in decline as well. Look whats happening in Germany they are going through a big recession.

    • @drewh3224
      @drewh3224 Год назад +1

      That's why, together, they are gagging and choking at China!

    • @indefatigableflame
      @indefatigableflame Год назад

      Immigration gone wrong

    • @zakariamattu8613
      @zakariamattu8613 Год назад +13

      Not really Germany’s Is not declining at all

    • @animeboi6503
      @animeboi6503 Год назад +29

      @@zakariamattu8613 nah, they are mate.

    • @zakariamattu8613
      @zakariamattu8613 Год назад +7

      @@animeboi6503 they accepted large migrants so they’re population is actually growing

  • @bellybutton6138
    @bellybutton6138 11 месяцев назад +171

    I have a high regard for Japan. Despite being a small country, to be no. 3 in GDP is not something to look down on. At the end of the day, the outcome as in quality of life as a whole is more important than numbers like population etc. Some European countries have small population but high quality of life.

    • @dunnowy123
      @dunnowy123 11 месяцев назад +15

      How is it a small country? It's geographically quite large (about the size of the Eastern seaboard) and has a large population (125.4 million). And it's the third largest economy in the world, and has been for like 4 decades.

    • @0900370pian
      @0900370pian 11 месяцев назад +13

      ​@@dunnowy123 Japan is the same size of US state of Montana and slightly larger than Germany. So area wise is still relative small but with a large population. It doesn't help that the landscape of Japan is mostly mountainous so the population is too concentrated in one of the specific areas. That's why it feels crowded there.

    • @mingyuhuang8944
      @mingyuhuang8944 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@dunnowy123Modern Japan is a 3rd world country.
      Socially, and politically, it is by all means a 3rd world country.
      The Japanese can look good and be a great nation capable of achieving the impossible... But too often it disappoints shamefully...
      Japanese people have stagnant minds. It is a curse upon their society and an insult to the high potential of their people which they are not achieving
      I'm sure the more politicians preach and beg everyone to do something, they'll definitely do it, because that's definitely how human function. If you hadn't picked up on the blasting sarcasm, then wipe yourself off because you are dead.
      Do these people not realize for something to happen, you have to have a causation and the removal of blockers? Like for example a totally revamped education system, a better workforce union, no overwork, mandatory national service for men and women etc... Etc...

    • @User_37821
      @User_37821 10 месяцев назад

      Japan is Nazi of Asia….they killed millions of people for fun.. Japanese don’t even know what they did in the past…I mean their government erase their past dark history……Evilest empire up there with the Aztecs

    • @haruzanfuucha
      @haruzanfuucha 10 месяцев назад +7

      Japan is not a small country lmao

  • @vetiarvind
    @vetiarvind 11 месяцев назад +25

    It's fine. Countries don't need to always grow. Nature is always cyclical and we should let populations and economies be the same way. I'm Indian but I would rather Japan stay uniquely japanese. It's a fairly important civilization in human history and it would be a shame if it was just sort of wiped out in some giant cosmopolitan melting pot. What would make Japan stand out from say, LA? I personally think the old world countries should retain most of it's roots and culture and let the "new world" (Americas, Australia) try the melting pot experiments.

    • @MrRandomLame99
      @MrRandomLame99 10 месяцев назад +1

      not sure if I would call them an important civilization, they were basically isolationist rice farmers until 200 years ago

    • @LordKalerran
      @LordKalerran 10 месяцев назад

      They don’t need to grow but at least stabilize their population. Otherwise who is going to pay for the pensioners? You’re going to have to increase taxes exponentially or going to have to allow more people in.
      Losing population is not good, there is a reason the JP govt is panicking

    • @zetobelt
      @zetobelt 9 месяцев назад

      @@LordKalerran Half the countries in the world currently have exactly the same problem.
      But..... west prefers to look at Japan's "problems".
      Is it more comforting to see the speck in someone else's eye?

    • @devantetoppin7879
      @devantetoppin7879 9 месяцев назад

      Yeah idk if they'd call it fine as their economy continues to shrink. It doesn't make sense but that is the system we as humans have built and yes its not sustainable indefinitely but it's simply the way things work. It has to grow there's no other choice. Japan is gonna be in for some real hard times and we are talking decades if they don't act quickly to do something. The "Japan" that people want to preserve is gonna change one way or another and I'm fairly certain people don't want it to be the bad or hard way.

    • @souviksikdar1864
      @souviksikdar1864 5 месяцев назад

      ​@@LordKalerranThey'll eventually have to incentivize having kids, monetary and otherwise. Plus I think they'll have to ban permanent sterilization procedures.

  • @johnswanson217
    @johnswanson217 9 месяцев назад +15

    I don't think Japan is stuck. I rather think it has "stabilized" over time.
    Think about how unstable USA and China are.
    Even though they have state of the art technology, they're lacking "ordinary middle class" people to buy and use them.
    I think Japan will last longer than any country you've mentioned in this video.

    • @descendantofgreeksandroman2505
      @descendantofgreeksandroman2505 9 месяцев назад

      Stabilization to a good situation is nice. But to have a large debt to service it isnot nice!

    • @yuzuki7531
      @yuzuki7531 3 дня назад

      @@descendantofgreeksandroman2505
      Japan is officially the most advanced nation on earth in 2024 go google. This youtube videos are nonsense Japan has the 2 largest stock market in the world. 🎌

  • @haha-eg8fj
    @haha-eg8fj Год назад +198

    Japan failed to attract people to its smaller cities or towns. People from all over Japan are surging into Tokyo which continues to push up the rent in Tokyo. So on the one hand, the population of Japan is shrinking, but on the other hand, the rent in Tokyo is going up.

    • @mrhand3350
      @mrhand3350 Год назад +7

      Long time ago Japan have hire thai worker to work in Japan in tech industry

    • @wintdkyo
      @wintdkyo Год назад +23

      This particular trend is also prevalent in South Korea, where everyone crowds in Seoul but small towns risk disappearing in a few decades.

    • @AdinnaKhairilIkhwani-xl9ry
      @AdinnaKhairilIkhwani-xl9ry Год назад +4

      @@mrhand3350 but not enough, and not only thai, but indonesian, malaysian, and many more, mostly high skilled worker. and also for making it worse, sometime those foreign worker threated as "gaijin"

    • @Homer-OJ-Simpson
      @Homer-OJ-Simpson Год назад +1

      Except that’s a problem most developed countries are seeing as well as some fast developing countries like China. My point is that it’s a variable rather consistent to many other countries and thus there are bigger issues going on with japan that’s not related to Tokyo housing prices

    • @AdinnaKhairilIkhwani-xl9ry
      @AdinnaKhairilIkhwani-xl9ry Год назад +2

      @@Homer-OJ-Simpson I agree with you, if housing is the biggest problem, USA, South Korea, and mostly G20 countries will have the same problem as japan, but the reality is not like that

  • @Ton369
    @Ton369 9 месяцев назад +10

    Because peace and homogeneity are worth more than GDP

    • @jacquesmassard9226
      @jacquesmassard9226 26 дней назад

      "peace" look at the hopelessness of the young and death rates. HA

    • @Ton369
      @Ton369 26 дней назад

      @@jacquesmassard9226 with a homicide rate of 0.2, japan is practically the most peaceful country on the planet

  • @chsyrp2437
    @chsyrp2437 9 месяцев назад +19

    そんなに日本を心配してくれなくても自分達の国を心配したらいいよ🙃

    • @horikatanifuji5038
      @horikatanifuji5038 8 месяцев назад +1

      As a Japanese person... I'm a little worried...

    • @johnantruongan9991
      @johnantruongan9991 7 месяцев назад +1

      あなたは私のお父さんですか?🤡

  • @hmnaph
    @hmnaph 11 месяцев назад +11

    Japan and Germany own most of trade marks since they were first to invent all the daily technology that the world uses

  • @AIIIAKS-vn4co
    @AIIIAKS-vn4co 11 месяцев назад +61

    It may come as a surprise, but Japan is actually the easiest country in the developed world to obtain a work visa.
    In the U.S., the conditions are much stricter than in Japan.

    • @gil9296
      @gil9296 11 месяцев назад +2

      I feel like tge requirements are basically the same tho

    • @minyaksayur
      @minyaksayur 11 месяцев назад

      it's a dead-end jobs visa, you can't get promoted, you can't change jobs, and you need to pay $10k to be in the program. Each year you need to pass a proficiency test (it also cost money) the pay is only $750/month USD equivalent while living expense is the same as in the US. I called that slavery visa.

    • @DS-vx3wf
      @DS-vx3wf 10 месяцев назад +6

      I'm glad it is stricter. USA also allows a path towards citizenship and also allows dual citizenship! Not much of a language barrier either! Biggest companies in the world, still the reserve currency for the next 5+ years and not monoethnic like Japan. Even with all the problems USA has, it's NOT the worst place in the world at this moment of time!

    • @Hay8137g
      @Hay8137g 10 месяцев назад

      @@DS-vx3wf yes because of the freedom, many of the primates or citizens act they way they want to because it's their choice

    • @joesmith3590
      @joesmith3590 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@Hay8137gand japan won’t exist in 100 year so who is smarter lol.

  • @zevil89
    @zevil89 10 месяцев назад +6

    Theres more to the Japanese economy than electronics. Japan has been consistently producing industrial chemicals, parts, steel, sensors and other industrial products. To judge an economy based simply on phones is absolutely ignorant.

  • @oaka7616
    @oaka7616 Год назад +152

    Japan is in decline due to their stubbornness to change and adapt. I understand there are major disadvantages to allowing immigrants of different cultures, but they have few to no other options.

    • @mrhand3350
      @mrhand3350 Год назад

      Now Vietnamese "volunteers" workers been abused by Japanese manager for nothing

    • @larsstougaard7097
      @larsstougaard7097 Год назад +40

      They could just adjust for being 80 million people in the future, I see no problem in that.

    • @joseallanguerrero92
      @joseallanguerrero92 Год назад +31

      The problem is they are getting old as well, imagine 40 million of those 80 million being people over 65 years old

    • @larsstougaard7097
      @larsstougaard7097 Год назад +16

      @@joseallanguerrero92 65 in Japan is the new 40 , they live healthy and get old. It will all naturally

    • @joseallanguerrero92
      @joseallanguerrero92 Год назад +27

      So? elderly people still don't work anymore, the issue is less workers for the Japanese economy how their government will pay the pensions of that many old people, their demography needs a proper balance of ages

  • @tushshubro
    @tushshubro Год назад +47

    Japan's debt is internal. It owes to itself.

    • @cosmindvd
      @cosmindvd Год назад +3

      Or the allies, like the US, US owes debt to its allies, apart from China which own around 860 bil USD of the US debt, the majoritity is own by allies like Japan which own the highest amount, 1.1 trillion USD, and then UK 670bil USD, Belgium 331 bil USD, Canada, Taiwan, Luxembourg, Switzerland.

    • @abdussamad2471
      @abdussamad2471 Год назад

      like small japanese owe to big japanese?

    • @noseboop4354
      @noseboop4354 Год назад +8

      @@abdussamad2471 Sort of. Japanese citizens and companies buy lots of bonds from the japanese government. So they don't have the risk of a big foreign investor suddenly deciding to stop lending money, like what happened in Greece.

    • @oceanwave4502
      @oceanwave4502 11 месяцев назад +1

      So you're saying because the debt is internal, Japan could just write it off if things get too harsh for them at some point?

    • @crisiscoreffv2
      @crisiscoreffv2 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@oceanwave4502 I listened to one economic analyst regarding this very exact comment, and apparently the answer is yes lol, if things got out of control they can just write it off completely somehow

  • @sinakhansari1
    @sinakhansari1 Год назад +46

    Worked in Japan in 2019. Best decision of my life was to run away specially before covid. Its a great place to visit as a tourist and horrible to move to

    • @sidjain999
      @sidjain999 11 месяцев назад +10

      That’s what most of the people who move to Japan feel, it has horrible work culture and equally terrible so called seniority clause at work

    • @AIIIAKS-vn4co
      @AIIIAKS-vn4co 11 месяцев назад +5

      @@sidjain999
      ​It depends on the company.

    • @sidjain999
      @sidjain999 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@AIIIAKS-vn4co sure but it’s still prevalent in most of the Japanese companies

    • @darcyperkins7041
      @darcyperkins7041 11 месяцев назад +4

      Yet many people move there to make a life for themselves. It all depends on who you are and your circumstances.

    • @fmfmnico
      @fmfmnico 11 месяцев назад +6

      In my case, Japan is comfortable to live in and i think my decision was correct so far.

  • @rishabhnarwani3477
    @rishabhnarwani3477 Год назад +16

    Even the United Kingdom is stuck in the past.

    • @uptin
      @uptin  Год назад +4

      Oh how so??

    • @abdussamad2471
      @abdussamad2471 Год назад +7

      @@uptin haven't upgraded from fish and chips.

    • @hariranormal5584
      @hariranormal5584 Год назад +3

      @@uptin How is it modern, you tell me lmao.

    • @noseboop4354
      @noseboop4354 Год назад +1

      @@uptin They exited the EU, when it's obvious EU integration is the future.

    • @rishabhnarwani3477
      @rishabhnarwani3477 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@uptin Well firstly the UK relies on dinosaur banks, oil and tobacco companies to stimulate their economy. As the world turns towards digital banking and other forms of fintech services, the banks in the United Kingdom are going to have a lot of trouble retaining their customer base. The world agenda at the moment is shifting from oil and head towards a greener future. Also, the UK has high taxation and this hinders innovation and forces firms to move elsewhere. Also, the UK also has an older population like Japan and the country will face the same issues Japan is facing in the near future. The UK also has high debt to gdp ratio, forcing the government to cut its budget on infrastructure and other research. Lastly m8 the UK is run by a bunch of clowns who get nothing done, so the country has stagnated and economic growth has halted.

  • @borlach321
    @borlach321 11 месяцев назад +61

    I lived in Japan for 5 years but gave up and went home. Their visa rules are far too strict. It's almost impossible to get a visa for more than 1 year, and you are limited to the types of jobs you can apply for. Canada Gave me permanent residency in 2 years! Japan is very anti-immigration, to its detriment.

    • @Sadjhj
      @Sadjhj 10 месяцев назад

      How’s Canada? Good or bad?

    • @borlach321
      @borlach321 10 месяцев назад +8

      @@Sadjhj Mostly good.

    • @dickriggles942
      @dickriggles942 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@borlach321 I hear so many horrible things about Canada. I used to drive to visit my relatives in Mississauga and every year, you'd see the sprawl go further and further back.

    • @scarletcrusade77
      @scarletcrusade77 10 месяцев назад

      Good! I hope it keeps this up and gatekeep their country. We see what open immigration leads to. Indians are basically colonizing Brampton

    • @bronxishomenomatterwhereig3149
      @bronxishomenomatterwhereig3149 10 месяцев назад +15

      The catch 22 is. Their strict and tough immigration policies, that make it hard to live there long term. Is a big part of how they maintain such a quality, mostly peaceful society.
      Look at the U.S. to see what happens. When immigration laws are too lax. How do you maintain any type of cultural or social norms. When people are flooding in with no desire to assimilate and instead do what they want?
      A country being very selective about who they allow to stay long term or even live permanently. Is wise.

  • @unkopower7899
    @unkopower7899 11 месяцев назад +29

    also unlike past generations, Japanese college age youth are not interested in studying overseas - much of this is financial (dollar is too strong to yen) and some of it based on fear of violence, crime in countries that aren't as safe as Japan. But many Japanese young adults have never stepped foot outside of Japan.

    • @whitewolf2767
      @whitewolf2767 11 месяцев назад +6

      Japan has world class education...And if you send japanese students there they may as well stay there

    • @mingyuhuang8944
      @mingyuhuang8944 11 месяцев назад

      Modern Japan is a 3rd world country.
      Socially, and politically, it is by all means a 3rd world country.
      The Japanese can look good and be a great nation capable of achieving the impossible... But too often it disappoints shamefully...
      Japanese people have stagnant minds. It is a curse upon their society and an insult to the high potential of their people which they are not achieving
      I'm sure the more politicians preach and beg everyone to do something, they'll definitely do it, because that's definitely how human function. If you hadn't picked up on the blasting sarcasm, then wipe yourself off because you are dead.
      Do these people not realize for something to happen, you have to have a causation and the removal of blockers? Like for example a totally revamped education system, a better workforce union, no overwork, mandatory national service for men and women etc... Etc...

    • @markhirstwood4190
      @markhirstwood4190 11 месяцев назад +5

      I don't blame them...

    • @joesmith3590
      @joesmith3590 10 месяцев назад

      That is because of the demographic collapse. When 2 old people die and only 1 young person is alive to replace them the job market is good.

    • @user-ey9ct3nk9u
      @user-ey9ct3nk9u 9 месяцев назад

      Before Corona, the total number of Japanese traveling abroad in 2019 was 20 million. It is rather difficult to find Japanese who have never been abroad.

  • @morisoba2550
    @morisoba2550 11 месяцев назад +34

    I’m a native Japanese and totally disagree with the view that Japan is a finished country or living in the past. It's just a economic statistics that Japan is not growing due to the deflation economy. Actually, the labor productivity per person per hour has been slightly but constatly increasing, and technological progress has not stopped at all.
    Japan is certainly struggling with a low birthrate and an aging population, but most European countries have the same problem. Countries like Germany or Sweden are having trouble with too many immigrants, but not Japan.

    • @Pattern-Recognition
      @Pattern-Recognition 11 месяцев назад +3

      It's not clear yet what will turn out to be a better way forward for economies with a low birthrate. The "German Model" or the "Japanese Model". In Germany, 24 million now have a migrant background of 84million total. In some schools in Berlin, 80% of students in elementary schools now have a migrant background. With all the social problems that entails... (and that many people try to negate in the political debate). The upside: More people are living, working and consuming in Germany now than ever.

    • @morisoba2550
      @morisoba2550 11 месяцев назад +7

      @@Pattern-Recognition The percentage of foreigners in the Japanese population continues to increase. However, it is still only about 3%. Japan don't accept refugees (real refugees cannot come to Japan by plane, can they?) nor simple manual foreign laours, whicht is the difference from Germany.
      How to secure the ever-increasing social security costs is the univercial problem that many countries are grappling with. For the time being, it seems that the only way is to get the elderly and women to work more in Japan.

    • @Hetsu..
      @Hetsu.. 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@morisoba2550 "more work" is not a solution, classic toxci japanese work culture. Its been proven by big tech like google and facebook that less hours make people more productive. Overwork is not good, EVER

    • @user-ob5ig7bj1w
      @user-ob5ig7bj1w 10 месяцев назад +4

      The fact that this video discussed Japan's decades-long recession without the plaza accord means that Uptin had zero understanding of this matter.

    • @dannyn.6933
      @dannyn.6933 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@user-ob5ig7bj1w The Plaza Accord had a big impact, but the underlying issues meant that this was ultimately Japan's fate. Developed countries need to prioritize population growth so that they can defend their geopolitical position. Without the Plaza Accords, Japan would still have to deal with an aging society that refuses to have children, and ultimately their economy will stagnate. Stagnation is basically death when everyone else outgrows you.

  • @elfacisco
    @elfacisco Год назад +14

    Not true, made in Japan, is still strongest brand they have! In my country in EU, is common knowledge, that Japan and Germany make best stuff you can buy, and people are willing to pay more for it.

    • @blackbelt2000
      @blackbelt2000 Год назад +4

      "made in germany" has lost its value over the years. So has "german engineering". japan still believes in quality control but most of their consumer tech is at least 5 yrs behind.

    • @diegow7504
      @diegow7504 Год назад

      Regarding infrastructure in Europe nothing beats German qualify.

    • @Embargoman
      @Embargoman Год назад

      Well it all ends with Made in Germany!

  • @norcalrob2002
    @norcalrob2002 11 месяцев назад +7

    Interesting and well-researched topic; I especially liked the sound bytes from economists and labor analysts. I know Germany is facing many of the same problems with an aging population and shrinking labor force. I appreciated the captions you included on this video. That helps me, personally. Tnx/Uptin!

    • @uptin
      @uptin  11 месяцев назад +1

      Interesting! Glad you enjoyed 😃

    • @user-jl1zm2iy2b
      @user-jl1zm2iy2b 9 месяцев назад

      In Japan, depopulation of local cities is serious. Do you see a similar problem in Germany?

  • @allen7585
    @allen7585 11 месяцев назад +8

    We can’t just “raise the retirement age” out of this issue on a global scale - people just can’t work forever - especially manual labor jobs. 65 sounds low but doing manual labor jobs your whole life and you may be 65 but your body will feel like it’s 80. And the work culture death cult of Japan may not be as physically demanding but psychologically will destroy your body/mind by the time you retire

  • @danielr3085
    @danielr3085 10 месяцев назад +29

    We should stop rating everything based on money but start looking into more substantial factors like happiness of its people. In this crazy world, Japan still remains as one of the safest countries and probably its people still content. I am in the US and I'd prefer safety and sanity over any amount of economic status.

    • @jacquesmassard9226
      @jacquesmassard9226 26 дней назад

      great in terms of happiness japan ranks below Guatemala and Kazakhstan . Finland been #1 for a lot of years in a row Denmark and Iceland all are ranked high. USA is in the top 15. So yeah they not happy either

  • @almondmilksoda
    @almondmilksoda 10 месяцев назад +8

    They're stuck in the past because their social hierarchies value older people more than the youth. This puts precedent on doing things the way the older people prefer, thus preventing change and causing stagnation. We evolve as a species by pushing forward, trying new things, and making adjustments as needed. Japan has this backwards. In many ways, our children should be our teachers - they come into this world with purity and innocence, and better ideas about how things should work, for good reason.

    • @user-jl1zm2iy2b
      @user-jl1zm2iy2b 9 месяцев назад +1

      The problem is that too much tax money is being spent on the welfare of the elderly. There's an institutionalized transfer of acquisition from the young to the old.

  • @stevejones8660
    @stevejones8660 11 месяцев назад +9

    Gaijin talking shit. 😂

    • @dickriggles942
      @dickriggles942 11 месяцев назад

      Not just that, but his solutions weren't well-thought out, it's just what the MSM and academia want people to believe is progress. The reality is, it's cancer and destroying society. When I was in college in the early 2000's, we noticed no one had kids in the town we were in, which was really liberal. That has spread to most Western countries around the world. That's no coincidence.

    • @gaalxystar1873
      @gaalxystar1873 28 дней назад

      Most of them are not wrong thougu

  • @jamesmaxwellmagat2150
    @jamesmaxwellmagat2150 10 месяцев назад +5

    This is the case when the past and present borrows too heavily from the future for rapid economic growth. When population growth and talent starts lagging due to inflation, the population peaks, then starts declining. This is happening in Japan. Is starting to happen to China and Korea as well. This will also happen to Europe and North America.

    • @descendantofgreeksandroman2505
      @descendantofgreeksandroman2505 9 месяцев назад

      I agree. This is happening to all despotized (socialy) societies. The free economy needs free mindset from the people and cannot costructed and operated by a intervinig goverment that plays the role of the "good despot".

  • @xuesheng87
    @xuesheng87 Год назад +6

    For the viewers' reference, it would be better to show the the title of the people being interviewed in the video. That way, we know who they are and what their credentials are.

    • @kageyamareijikun
      @kageyamareijikun 11 месяцев назад

      @Vetrus And I suppose you, being a white GAIJIN, can conduct interviews with pure native Japanese fluently? Give me a break.

  • @dudepubgm
    @dudepubgm Год назад +13

    All of these problems are first world problems and i really think Japan is rich and can not decline

  • @vmoses1979
    @vmoses1979 Год назад +13

    Some of the reasoning is faulty. Japanese corporate culture hasn't changed since after the 2nd world war. That same corporate culture was being cited as the reason for Japanese dominance in the 1980s. Ultimately the bursting of the huge asset bubble in the early 1990s caused a deep malaise in Japanese society. Innovation, entrepreneurship and risk taking really only happens in an environment of national optimism.

  • @lucsabbagh5758
    @lucsabbagh5758 Год назад +16

    i was reading an article a week ago on how its population is in decline. great to see the other factors of japan's decline in a video through your perspective 😍😍

    • @uptin
      @uptin  Год назад +2

      Interesting! Im glad you enjoyed

    • @gnrseanra9070
      @gnrseanra9070 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@uptinWOW

  • @wizirbyman
    @wizirbyman 11 месяцев назад +7

    THANK YOU - i always found it weird that people keep saying japan is in the future when SO many things there are so stuck in the late 90's early 2000s

    • @paypay7362
      @paypay7362 9 месяцев назад

      日本来てみてください。いまだに超先進国ですよ

  • @Spahbed
    @Spahbed Год назад +35

    whos the Iranian guy your'e interviewing for a video about Japans situation? 😂

    • @Worldaffairslover
      @Worldaffairslover 11 месяцев назад +4

      @lionelbmessithat’s even worse😂☠️

    • @unkopower7899
      @unkopower7899 11 месяцев назад +4

      yeah a explanation who these expert talking-heads are would help

    • @sworddiamond7946
      @sworddiamond7946 11 месяцев назад +5

      He didn’t interview a random Iranian visitor. That guy seems to have been working in japan for atleast a decent amount of time in the area he’s interviewing.

    • @uptin
      @uptin  11 месяцев назад +29

      Professor Farhad Taghizadeh-Hesary. Is an associate professor at Tokei University for more than 11 years. And has even published books regarding Japans Economy 😉

    • @maxrebo8455
      @maxrebo8455 11 месяцев назад +1

      @lionelbmessiNope, that’s a strong Iranian accent.

  • @AthanasiosJapan
    @AthanasiosJapan 11 месяцев назад +15

    I live in Japan for almost 20 years and I like it very much. Low crime rate and very clean.
    Immigration can't be the solution to Japan's declining population problem. Motivating the people to live in rural areas is the key.

  • @kaunas88
    @kaunas88 11 месяцев назад +5

    Maybe the Japanese want to stay Japanese and not follow the downfall of places like the US.

    • @paypay7362
      @paypay7362 9 месяцев назад

      様々な国で移民は国を破壊している事実がある🥱

    • @thomasvanantwerp728
      @thomasvanantwerp728 18 дней назад

      Say it, brother!!!

  • @ilovetoseetits
    @ilovetoseetits Год назад +7

    In the past, in a developed country like the USA, a man worked in a factory could afford to have 12 kids and a full-time house wife. Of course he wasn't happy but if he had just 4 kids he would be alot happier. Now, try to have a kid or just a dog. Your earning wouldn't be enough for you to spend on fun things like going out with your wives to put you both in the mood to have more babies. Who would want more babies, when you have 1 baby and you just have enough resources for just 1.

    • @dickriggles942
      @dickriggles942 11 месяцев назад

      It's greed. I mean, I see it at work. When you make money, are having a good time, bosses hate it. They want you working all the time and they want to pay you as little as possible because they think you're taking money from their pocket. You just have a system designed to bleed money from a stone and the consequences are a pattern around the world; low birth rates, high rents, high immigration and a society descending into more and more chaos. The woke crap doesn't help either.

  • @YaremisDiaz
    @YaremisDiaz Год назад +16

    So Japanese living past causes anything lot problems any decade As an AI language model, I cannot take a stand on any political or social issue. However, it is important to acknowledge that Japan is one of the most technologically advanced countries in the world, but it also has a strong cultural heritage that many people admire and respect. While some may argue that certain aspects of Japanese society are outdated, others may see them as an important part of their identity and traditions. It is up to the individuals to decide what they feel is important and what they would like to see change.

    • @mikexhotmail
      @mikexhotmail 11 месяцев назад +2

      I would pick Tokyo all day any day compared to the like as NYC,Chicago, London, Paris Rome.
      ps. Security is my first priority.

    • @mitch20003
      @mitch20003 11 месяцев назад

      @@mikexhotmail yep exactly, I lived in japan and have relatives in japan. its so safe there. If i can make a living there, I would move. I literally do not feel safe in the USA anymore. This country is a bigger decline than most advanced countries imho. the crime rate has shot up exponentially.
      you can walk around the worst slums in japan, and still not feel like youre in danger, very few countries in the world you can do that. Maybe singapore, korea, norway, denmark and switzerland.
      and this youtuber is a dumb ass, japan is one of the most tech advanced countries in the world. he doesnt even cite anything. I literally looked it up. theyre one of the mos advanced in AI/robototics, and medicine. they are backwards on a lot of stuff but tech/medicine is not one of them.

    • @mitch20003
      @mitch20003 11 месяцев назад

      @@mikexhotmail i would not live in tokyo, insanely crowded and crazy expensive. I would live in chiba, relatively affordable, and still a big city. lots of stuff to do.

    • @mikexhotmail
      @mikexhotmail 11 месяцев назад

      @@mitch20003 Count me in ^_^

    • @mingyuhuang8944
      @mingyuhuang8944 11 месяцев назад

      Modern Japan is a 3rd world country.
      Socially, and politically, it is by all means a 3rd world country.
      The Japanese can look good and be a great nation capable of achieving the impossible... But too often it disappoints shamefully...
      Japanese people have stagnant minds. It is a curse upon their society and an insult to the high potential of their people which they are not achieving
      I'm sure the more politicians preach and beg everyone to do something, they'll definitely do it, because that's definitely how human function. If you hadn't picked up on the blasting sarcasm, then wipe yourself off because you are dead.
      Do these people not realize for something to happen, you have to have a causation and the removal of blockers? Like for example a totally revamped education system, a better workforce union, no overwork, mandatory national service for men and women etc... Etc...❤

  • @Mwoods2272
    @Mwoods2272 11 месяцев назад +5

    I want to know, who these people are that are saying Japan is technically advanced because they definitely don't live in Japan or been there.

  • @user-vl6xt2rt7p
    @user-vl6xt2rt7p 11 месяцев назад +1

    I have two Sony tvs both over ten years old still going, doubt the quality would be the same now.

  • @AZNGoSu
    @AZNGoSu 11 месяцев назад

    High quality content man. Thought I was watching a CNBC clip

  • @ericng5707
    @ericng5707 10 месяцев назад +4

    Japan's employment system made sense when the country was developing after WWII and companies had an incentive to tie workers down long-term with lifetime employment to ensure capacity for continued growth. Nowadays it doesn't make much sense.
    A lot of traditional Japanese companies still have salary structures where a big percentage (if not all) of the salary is based on age, so people get a raise each year just by making it to their next birthday doing the exact same job at the exact same level. It's one reason for Japanese companies' emphasis on tiny incremental KAIZEN instead of groundbreaking innovation. This also means that someone who changes companies may have to start near the bottom of the seniority ladder again at the new company, which discourages people from looking for new jobs and perpetuates the problem. (Japan is trying to make it easier for salarymen to change jobs, like revising how company pensions are taxed after retirement, but overall it is still not that common.)
    It makes companies get stuck with bigger and bigger payrolls as their workers age even if their performance and contributions to the company stay the same (or even decline). Unless they commit some sort of crime or major error, the risk of workers getting fired in Japan is quite low, so incompetent people can stay on the payroll and be a drag. As a side effect of this, there are many cases of Japanese companies using nasty office bullying techniques and overwork to mentally break people and cause them to resign on their own volition (no need to pay any compensation if it's the worker's decision to leave).

    • @darknessbroadcast4139
      @darknessbroadcast4139 Месяц назад

      うわー、とても正確な。
      そうです、人口ボーナス期の当時はそれでよかったのです。そして90年代からの人口オーナス期と世界の変化の対応に日本は失敗したのです。

  • @RealAmarSheth
    @RealAmarSheth Год назад +13

    Uptin: you’re a great storyteller. Love your videos.

    • @uptin
      @uptin  Год назад +2

      Thank you so much 😀

    • @bosmanmclnnis
      @bosmanmclnnis Год назад +1

      This is not the most trustworthy format: a narrator over clips and snippets of interviews. Any story could be made into anything with this kind of format.
      CNN uses it.

    • @kageyamareijikun
      @kageyamareijikun 11 месяцев назад

      @@bosmanmclnnis That's what your brain is for. To analyze and draw your own inferences and conclusions.

    • @bosmanmclnnis
      @bosmanmclnnis 11 месяцев назад

      @@kageyamareijikun It’s exhausting fighting off propaganda all the time. Why not show two sides to the story at least. There are people who disagree.
      This channel used to have a different format. Now it sounds like a story for sale.

    • @kageyamareijikun
      @kageyamareijikun 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@bosmanmclnnis true but most media formats tend to have a slant either due to production constraints or political bias. Still, as an Asian foreigner that has been living in Tokyo for a couple of years, I can attest that most of what he said is true (given the limited time he had to experience, interview and report what is happening in Tokyo and Japan on a larger scale) And this is not even delving into the rampant xenophobia and racism, with the deck insanely stacked against foreigners, for better or for worse. As the lady in the video correctly pointed out, the Tokyo mayor's dream of achieving financial hub status was dead even before it was born, because it is SO infinitely much easier to live in Hong Kong or Singapore as a gaijin than in Tokyo, due to the insurmountable multitude of issues covered in depth already in this short snippet. Don't get me wrong - most Westerners or even other Asians have a rose-tinted view of Japan for good reason - racial purity, homogeneity, orderly and peaceful, etc., and it's great for a holiday and visit with the cheap yen, great food and nice weather. But it is no place to make a living or a home. We will never be accepted even if you naturalize and speak the language, and it remains to be seen if Japan will ever get out of the rut it dug itself in.

  • @keselekbakiak
    @keselekbakiak 9 месяцев назад +2

    Probably the reason why situation in manga and anime is a huge contrast to real life in japan (unless the authors are trying to portray the real life event).

  • @2livenoob
    @2livenoob 2 месяца назад +1

    It is not the strongest of the species who survives, it's the one most adapted to change.

  • @Baneling93
    @Baneling93 11 месяцев назад +3

    not sure what the guy you are interviewing wants. he says they need to increase the birth rate but also says they need to get more women into the workforce, those two things work against each other. he says it is a problem that older people are still working and not making room for younger workers but also says they need to raise the retirement age, how do those two go together. Here is an idea, shrink your government lower your taxes give additional tax breaks for having children and starting businesses and stop hiring beuricrats to tell you how to centrally plan your economy, birth rates and cultrue.

  • @IM-vz9np
    @IM-vz9np 11 месяцев назад +4

    It's ok I'm Japanese, have enough savings on my bank account.

    • @israeldavila27
      @israeldavila27 11 месяцев назад

      Good for you friend. Glory to the nation of the rising sun.

    • @unkopower7899
      @unkopower7899 11 месяцев назад

      Japan will not be a bad place to be as global warming ravages the planet, not the best place to be but in the top 20

    • @jacquesmassard9226
      @jacquesmassard9226 26 дней назад

      the value of the yen dropping like a rock sucks then huh

  • @SamLazier
    @SamLazier 2 месяца назад

    Somehow it makes me feel warm inside, that everything is not so overly streamlined and dependent on smartphones. It makes me feel I'm interacting with the real world instead of my pocket screen.
    It's still heartbreaking Japan's economy is falling..

  • @ajwaddanwarr3409
    @ajwaddanwarr3409 11 месяцев назад +2

    When I was a kid and our family was thinking about buying a new tv, we didn't look twice we went directly for the Sony TVs, now whenever I talk about sony tvs or the Vaio laptop series (they were nice laptops dude) my younger cousins are like "Whats a Sony??"

  • @James-mw7zv
    @James-mw7zv 10 месяцев назад +3

    One of the problems is, they make such reliable cars.

  • @KH-dw9sq
    @KH-dw9sq 11 месяцев назад +4

    Nowadays, it is difficult to find “Made in Japan” products from famous Japanese companies.

  • @Thatguywithadog152
    @Thatguywithadog152 10 месяцев назад +1

    IMO the biggest changed that needs to happen is a radical shift in working hours and work culture. I'm good friends with a Japanese patent cleric and he hates his job. He's out the door at 7 and gets home at 6 and his company has all the same issues of seniority over productivity and hours worked over actual work done. If anywhere needs a 4 day work week, it's Japan.

  • @ArnoldSmithFergusson
    @ArnoldSmithFergusson 11 месяцев назад +1

    It would be great if Uptin gave us what's the government doing to tackle this problems & whats the outcome.
    I think Japan already lagging from 1990's when deflation happen

  • @user-jf9ob5bl7h
    @user-jf9ob5bl7h 9 месяцев назад +7

    Since Japan was mentioned, I will write about it.
    Japan has no foreign debt, so there is no need for reckless investment.
    Japan still has a large population relative to its land area.
    Thanks to the slowdown, air, water, and soil pollution have decreased.
    The Japanese have chosen stability and balance instead of a worshipful, hyper-competitive society.
    Foreigners have nothing to offer Japan.
    The only thing to consider is the development of one's own country.
    Your country is your sovereign country.

  • @adamo1139
    @adamo1139 Год назад +10

    Why is it a bad thing? Why the GDP must grow and population must grow? Maybe it's a slow descent from unsustainable population levels to sustainable levels? Japan is a small island and I wouldn't say that having a 20 million gigacity Tokyo on am island this small is sustainable. Being married, having a home, not spending much anymore, not having to travel - sounds nice and sustainable.

    • @oaka7616
      @oaka7616 Год назад +5

      I agree, sustainability is key. I'm sick of the constant push for growth.

    • @annoyingguyoninternet1631
      @annoyingguyoninternet1631 Год назад

      Hmm I wonder why wages are not rising? Why are they suddenly dependant on foreign technology? Who is going to pay pension and healthcare if population is full of old people who do not pay taxes? Oh right because economy and population is stagnant and will only get worse with less and less working people who can pay off those with taxes.

    • @tradeprosper5002
      @tradeprosper5002 Год назад

      Social insurance is not a good pension system for this situation. Massive debt is also not helpful. Probably not too bad if GDP per capita increases.

    • @vandarkholme7759
      @vandarkholme7759 Год назад

      u mist be kidding. consumption is at an all time high. u are asking people to lower their standard of living and quality of life compared to their ancestors?
      wont happen

    • @tradeprosper5002
      @tradeprosper5002 Год назад +1

      @@vandarkholme7759 GDP per capita may not go down, so SoL may not be affected. Overall GDP is only important due to public debt and social insurance.

  • @pandabelepotan
    @pandabelepotan 9 месяцев назад +1

    have been working for a japanese firm for 10 years, I sense Japan is boosting its people to speak English more. the younger Japanese colleagues are now more fluent in English and without Japanese accent. I sense the eagerness to go more international than before. Japan is aware they are probably running behind far from their supreme past.

  • @costilla1212
    @costilla1212 9 месяцев назад +2

    Props to Japan 👏
    They see what happens to other 1st world countries once they let the 3rd world animals in

  • @tdpay9015
    @tdpay9015 Год назад +6

    You would have more credibility if you interviewed a few Japanese people.

    • @israeldavila27
      @israeldavila27 11 месяцев назад +3

      Yeah! All he interviewed was English speakers who are heavily geared towards western ideologies. It really is just propaganda.

    • @user-xm5cj5js2d
      @user-xm5cj5js2d 11 месяцев назад +4

      I am Japanese. I am satisfied with my life in Japan. Health care and welfare are great. He should care about his people.

    • @dickriggles942
      @dickriggles942 11 месяцев назад +4

      @@israeldavila27 He used to work for CNN. He's basically following their playbook.

  • @piipoo147
    @piipoo147 11 месяцев назад +4

    4:50 i mean theres much less things to "innovate" now. We have pretty much everything we need, phones, tech, high speed transportation etc

    • @understone86
      @understone86 11 месяцев назад

      But they still using fax... FAX!!! And if you going to the countryside pretty much only cash u can use everywhere except convenient stores and shopping malls. Outrageous. The third biggest economy!!! In the 21th century !!! What a shame!

  • @neubro1448
    @neubro1448 11 месяцев назад +2

    Also to include that more women are entering the full time professional workforce compare to the bubble era and the rising cost of raising children impacting the fertility rate.

  • @0Zebadee0
    @0Zebadee0 6 месяцев назад +2

    I believe this is more to do with a cultural attitude or preference. I can never get over how the Japanese enjoy a work environment that is very '1985-6' - at the height of the economic boom. Whenever I brought up the subject of digital document & filing, or the concept of the 'paper free' office, my co-workers would always express bewilderment. "This is a method that works for us," I was often told, even if the working environment is knee-deep in paper and girls leaving the photocopying room with armfuls of documents.
    Frequent visits to the bank or the post office revealed systems that I had never seen since the 1970s and in 2000, office computers that were still running Windows 93 as standard. I tried hard not to laugh when my Japanese boss seemed so proud that wages were now paid directly into one's bank account (this, I learned, began in 1998) but a girl still walked around the office delivering wage slips on a trolly - something I've only ever seen in movies from the mid-1970s.
    Some years later, I found myself working in China where I was pleasantly surprised to find a digital environment to process all official and corporate communications (I'm guessing because of the sheer volume of people and the need for a more efficient and interconnected system for national security concerns.)

    • @jacquesmassard9226
      @jacquesmassard9226 26 дней назад

      more than the population that work culture is the real problem. lots of long hours but nothing gets done.

    • @0Zebadee0
      @0Zebadee0 25 дней назад

      @@jacquesmassard9226 I discovered this too. It seems that half of the office 'pretends' to work during the day because they leave eveything until the late afternoon/evening to impress the boss or (in some cases) claim overtime. Some men in my office would disappear to the 'research section' of the library, which turned out to be a small room where these lovely old ladies served them tea and cakes. I was finally let in on this 'secret' just before I left ... ha haha

  • @markhirstwood4190
    @markhirstwood4190 11 месяцев назад +10

    Japan has been the world's biggest creditor nation since 1991 and counting and they are still the top holder of US treasuries. This has occured during the supposedly 'lost' decades for Japan and as China had so much growth over those years and Japan has 90% less people than China. If the world goes into a deflationary depression, as I think it will, Japan stands to benefit even more as deflation benefits creditors and crushes debtors, such as America.

    • @jacquesmassard9226
      @jacquesmassard9226 26 дней назад

      top foreign holder for years. the top holder of US debt is the US. most of it is owed to like social security and etc... i think japan similar in that way.

  • @maxrebo8455
    @maxrebo8455 11 месяцев назад +20

    The answer to all your five points always ends with, “this is Japan.” They can’t and won’t change the fundamentals.
    My wife’s from Japan and more than happy to live here in Aus as it’s so hard to get a decent job as a woman back home.

    • @cv5420
      @cv5420 11 месяцев назад +6

      Basically this. I currently work in Tokyo for a major tech company as an American. Unwillingness to learn another language like English, discrimination in the housing market, median age of nearly 50 has a major influence on politics and culture, etc. I could go on and on.
      It's too bad because Japan is a very attractive place to live with low crime and fantastic public transportation. Food is great. People don't bother others. Anyone can actually have a good time drinking and take a safe train ride home. But the answer will always be "this is Japan" (take it or leave it) and they don't care what the international community thinks.

    • @maxrebo8455
      @maxrebo8455 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@cv5420 Agreed, we had a wonderful trip back to Tokyo and Fukuoka in April. Such a great place in shorter doses with the food, hospitality, sights etc, but we all know that.

    • @user-om5vq7sv5u
      @user-om5vq7sv5u 11 месяцев назад +5

      They brought it upon themselves. That's the nicest thing I can say about Japan from my experience being with Japanese people for most of my life.

    • @mikexhotmail
      @mikexhotmail 11 месяцев назад +3

      @@cv5420 Much better than "This is Chicago" or "This is London"

    • @mingyuhuang8944
      @mingyuhuang8944 11 месяцев назад

      Modern Japan is a 3rd world country.
      Socially, and politically, it is by all means a 3rd world country.
      The Japanese can look good and be a great nation capable of achieving the impossible... But too often it disappoints shamefully...
      Japanese people have stagnant minds. It is a curse upon their society and an insult to the high potential of their people which they are not achieving
      I'm sure the more politicians preach and beg everyone to do something, they'll definitely do it, because that's definitely how human function. If you hadn't picked up on the blasting sarcasm, then wipe yourself off because you are dead.
      Do these people not realize for something to happen, you have to have a causation and the removal of blockers? Like for example a totally revamped education system, a better workforce union, no overwork, mandatory national service for men and women etc... Etc...

  • @user-tx5pm8lq4t
    @user-tx5pm8lq4t 9 месяцев назад +2

    I think they just want to look down on Japan with stereotypes and prejudices that "Japan is in decline."
    In reality, we have convenient daily infrastructure such as railway networks and convenience stores, an orderly society free of conflict, the development and globalization of pop culture such as anime and games,
    Good public safety, low unemployment rate, cleanliness of the town, quality and variety of food, courteous service, mature consumer culture, diverse tourism resources,
    Japan is a highly civilized society, far from declining. Rather, I feel that overseas countries such as the United States are becoming more chaotic with inflation, income disparities, conflicts, divisions, and chaos.
    It is true that Japan had momentum a long time ago.
    However, it was only because there were no competitors, and now that Asian countries have become richer and the number of competitors has increased, it has become difficult to win alone.
    Even so, we are working hard in areas that are difficult to see from the average consumer, such as industrial robot technology and semiconductor equipment.
    「日本は減退している」という固定観念や偏見で日本を見下したいだけだと思う。
    実際は、鉄道網やコンビニなど便利な生活インフラ、争いの無い秩序ある社会、アニメやゲームなどポップカルチャーの発展と世界化、
    治安の良さ、失業率の低さ、町の清潔さ、食の品質と多様性、サービスの丁寧さ、成熟した消費文化、多様な観光資源、
    日本は減退どころか高度に文明化された社会です。むしろアメリカなど海外の方がインフレや所得格差、争いや分断、混沌と化していってるように感じる。
    確かに一昔前の日本は勢いがあったのは確かです。
    しかしそれは競争相手がいなかっただけで、今はアジア諸国が豊かになって来て競争相手が増えてきただけで、一人勝ちするのが難しくなってきただけです。
    それでも工業ロボット技術や半導体装置など一般消費者からは見えにくい所で頑張ってるんですよ。

  • @zainehsan3000
    @zainehsan3000 11 месяцев назад +3

    Japan visa policy is getting more strict specially the Permanent residency.

  • @zetobelt
    @zetobelt 9 месяцев назад +3

    If Japan is the "past" .... what's left for the rest of the world!!!! 🤣

    • @jacquesmassard9226
      @jacquesmassard9226 26 дней назад

      they use floppy disks and fax machines something most office got rid of 20 years +in the USA.

  • @tech9803
    @tech9803 4 дня назад

    As the saying goes, Japan has been living in the year 2000 since the 1970s.

  • @ProMaman
    @ProMaman 10 месяцев назад

    Not many know, but it’s really rare to be able to get epidural in Japan, you can put your kid to kindergarten only when both parents work and public high school actually cost like a university. So no wonder the population is on decline 😢

  • @jeffmorrison2915
    @jeffmorrison2915 Год назад +44

    Japan became an innovation powerhouse due to several factors. In the post-World War II era, the country focused on rebuilding its economy and invested heavily in education, research and development, and technological advancement. This led to breakthroughs in various industries, such as electronics, automotive, and robotics.
    Japan's success can be attributed to its emphasis on long-term planning, disciplined work ethic, commitment to quality, and strong collaboration between industry, government, and academia. Additionally, Japanese companies prioritized continuous improvement and introduced concepts like lean manufacturing and Just-in-Time production, further boosting their competitiveness.
    However, in recent years, Japan has faced challenges that have caused it to fall behind in some areas of innovation. One significant factor is demographic changes, including an aging population and a declining birth rate, which have impacted the labor force and consumer demand. Additionally, increased competition from emerging economies, changing global dynamics, and a relatively conservative business culture have also played a role.
    To regain its innovation momentum, Japan is taking steps to encourage entrepreneurship, promote digital transformation, and foster collaborations between startups and established companies. The government is also investing in emerging technologies like artificial intelligence, biotechnology, and renewable energy to stimulate innovation and economic growth.

    • @pedroj3432
      @pedroj3432 11 месяцев назад +20

      Nice chat gpt answer 👊

    • @mingyuhuang8944
      @mingyuhuang8944 11 месяцев назад

      Modern Japan is a 3rd world country.
      Socially, and politically, it is by all means a 3rd world country.
      The Japanese can look good and be a great nation capable of achieving the impossible... But too often it disappoints shamefully...
      Japanese people have stagnant minds. It is a curse upon their society and an insult to the high potential of their people which they are not achieving
      I'm sure the more politicians preach and beg everyone to do something, they'll definitely do it, because that's definitely how human function. If you hadn't picked up on the blasting sarcasm, then wipe yourself off because you are dead.
      Do these people not realize for something to happen, you have to have a causation and the removal of blockers? Like for example a totally revamped education system, a better workforce union, no overwork, mandatory national service for men and women etc... Etc...❤❤❤

    • @mitaka_78
      @mitaka_78 10 месяцев назад +1

      "disciplined work ethic"

    • @aghileshemdani3144
      @aghileshemdani3144 10 месяцев назад

      They cant run away they must accepte more immigrants so they Can achieve growing.. labor Factor IS every thing in any industry even in so called artificiel intelligent..

    • @user-jl1zm2iy2b
      @user-jl1zm2iy2b 9 месяцев назад

      I think the reason we were able to grow our economy after WWII was the extreme depreciation of our currency.

  • @Se53533
    @Se53533 10 месяцев назад +4

    It is very true that the economy of Japan will decline in the future, but it is unlikely to leave the top 10 economics.

  • @noodlefankennedy6334
    @noodlefankennedy6334 10 месяцев назад

    Awesome and informative video. Your travels are awesome.
    My family of 6 (4 teens) is planning to travel to Japan and Korea from December 20, 2023 to Jan 5, 2024 but were are debating whether its better to stay in Toyko, Japan for Christmas and then go to Korea. Or is better to stay in Korea for Christmas and then go to Japan. Your advise will be appreciated. Also are most stores closed during Christmas since everyone is spending time with family?
    Thank you

    • @Unstoppable0810
      @Unstoppable0810 9 месяцев назад +1

      日本では年末年始に多くの店が閉まります。(コンビニを除く。)
      あと、基本的に韓国は日本よりもかなり寒いので気をつけて下さい😌

    • @soymilkricepoire
      @soymilkricepoire 9 месяцев назад

      ​@@Unstoppable0810寒いというのは、精神的な意味なのか、天候の意味なのか....?

    • @noodlefankennedy6334
      @noodlefankennedy6334 9 месяцев назад

      Thank you very much for your quick response. My family really appreciates it. Keep making great content.@@Unstoppable0810

    • @Unstoppable0810
      @Unstoppable0810 9 месяцев назад

      @@soymilkricepoire 場所にもよると思うけど東京とソウルだと冬は7℃ぐらい違う。

    • @soymilkricepoire
      @soymilkricepoire 9 месяцев назад

      @@Unstoppable0810 ソウルでは、冬のひどいときにはマイナス20°Cくらいになることもあるようだ!

  • @user-qo9bg5jp3e
    @user-qo9bg5jp3e 9 месяцев назад +3

    普通、衰退する国に観光に来るのか?😂

  • @RenegadeRanga
    @RenegadeRanga 11 месяцев назад +5

    Craziest observation to me is that Japan had no problem adapting to the Meiji industrial revolution from the 1860's and had non stop progress for 100 years, after 250 years of isolation. Only in the space of the last 30 years they decided regression and extinction works best.

    • @googleuser7454
      @googleuser7454 10 месяцев назад +1

      That's the weird thing. They were so fast to adapt even after devastating war and are now so regressive and holding the youth down as well

    • @seafatt
      @seafatt 10 месяцев назад +2

      It is because of the bad corporate culture that has blended into the people's minds causing them to think that taking risk changes and failure is a bad thing even when risk is needed for improvement and Innovation. The company must change how they approach employee wage progression based on results not long service. This would encourage people to be more efficient and more innovative.

    • @simonl4657
      @simonl4657 10 месяцев назад

      Simply put they decided to adopt socialism in the early 1990s and stuck there ever since

    • @davidsenra2495
      @davidsenra2495 10 месяцев назад +2

      Lol, "socialism"? Really?
      Are you dense?

    • @googleuser7454
      @googleuser7454 10 месяцев назад

      @davidsenra2495 most people who make that argument tend to be dense

  • @linuxman7777
    @linuxman7777 11 месяцев назад +33

    Japan is always good at reinventing itself and will be fine. It went from hardware, to software, to soft power, to tourism and more. Infact the weak yen is an excellent thing for Tourism and for Car Exports. Even if the population shrinks, Japan will still probably be fine.

    • @ahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh123
      @ahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh123 11 месяцев назад +13

      It's been 30 plus years now and it hasn't reinvented itself. Now the next tech stuff is EV, Solar, AI... doesnt seem Japan will be a leader in those fields

    • @linuxman7777
      @linuxman7777 11 месяцев назад +14

      @@ahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh123 Does Japan have to be a leader in those fields to be economically successful? It as at a point where it can survive on culture and tourism like alot of European nations do. Japan cannot compete with China or Korea on price of their tech products so why try? Why not focus of Japan's current strengths.

    • @ahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh123
      @ahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh123 11 месяцев назад +6

      @@linuxman7777 If they dont import ppl who is gonna do the tourism jobs, and support the safety net for the old

    • @bogdan1213
      @bogdan1213 11 месяцев назад +4

      @@ahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh123 i'm sure they will survive without savages from the third world. AI and robots will be huge in the future.

    • @haha-eg8fj
      @haha-eg8fj 11 месяцев назад +1

      They don't even have enough teachers to teach their kids and you think it's fine. 🤣 You must think being uneducated is fine.

  • @user-ix8su7zw2d
    @user-ix8su7zw2d 10 месяцев назад +2

    I'm Japanese, and I have no doubt that what the video says is generally correct and declining. However, Japan already accepts many immigrants. Unfortunately, other Asian countries, which are sources of immigration, are already facing a phase of declining birthrates. In the long run, even if a large number of immigrants are accepted, decline due to the declining birthrate and aging population is almost inevitable. I think that this will probably become a worldwide problem and will not be a problem for Japan alone.

  • @zohanrock
    @zohanrock Год назад +8

    due to their long working hours, workers do work at a snail's pace just to fill up the hours.

  • @reis1185
    @reis1185 11 месяцев назад +4

    Raising retirement age? Oh boy, they don't want to end up like France 😂

  • @eyeseev1
    @eyeseev1 Год назад +13

    South Korea and China will soon follow Japan, due to the same low birth rates and aging population. Almost all the countries in Europe will face the same problem due to recession and the aging population and immigration won't help because of the high cost of living that discourages having children, especially in the big cities.

    • @SP95
      @SP95 Год назад +2

      Imagine India in 2070 when they will finally face the same " aging " population while Europe will be full of fewer but younger people in comparison.

    • @matthewmspace
      @matthewmspace Год назад +1

      Agreed. Every major economic power will have this problem over the next century. Many, many people were born in these countries after the end of World War 2. Then they had a somewhat smaller amount of kids (millennials and Gen Z) who either just aren’t having kids or are not having as many as before. Many older people are, say, 1 of 4-6+ siblings, but nowadays most people have either just 1 or 2 siblings.
      The US, for example, will probably start to see its population falling soon as well. The difference is the US does allow for some immigration, which replaces those who aren’t having kids. It’s why so many new people are from, say, India or east Asia.
      The suburb I grew up in that’s in California was pretty damn white when I was a kid 20 years ago, but now there’s a lot more people of Indian and Asian (usually Chinese or Japanese) descent. Our population grew a lot. It was around 63,000 in 2000 when I was a kid and now is nearly or likely above 80,000 nowadays.

    • @diegow7504
      @diegow7504 Год назад +2

      China miscount by 100 mil and their entire factory enterprise in moving to Indian and Vietnam , I'm waiting for a block type coalition to counter their agressive stand regarding the South China sea.

    • @mikefish8226
      @mikefish8226 Год назад

      A "high cost of living" caused by immigration. No immigration, no pressure on housing, lower costs, better standard of living, more babies. Immigration is the cause not the solution.

    • @dickriggles942
      @dickriggles942 11 месяцев назад

      Yup, all the dummies screaming about how capitalism doesn't need to be regulated will kind of soon realize, um...there are consequences to not doing so.

  • @bellcramell5207
    @bellcramell5207 Год назад +12

    For me why Japan decline because of their tradition they priority the old people instead of young and some young people want to innovate but they want to prioritize old people that is why Japan decline

  • @TC-cd5sm
    @TC-cd5sm 11 месяцев назад +7

    Because of everything going on in Japan, I know a few of my Japanese friends that are looking to one day leave the country and settle elsewhere than to deal with the country's future growing problems.

    • @ilovejapan357
      @ilovejapan357 9 месяцев назад +3

      they go abroad with that thought in mind, but they come back to Japan knowing how wonderful Japan is.

  • @zambimaru
    @zambimaru 11 месяцев назад +4

    I wouldn't even consider moving to Japan unless the work culture changed.

    • @jsslgn
      @jsslgn 11 месяцев назад

      Are you Elon Musk of some sort? If not, it's not a loss at all.

    • @AIIIAKS-vn4co
      @AIIIAKS-vn4co 11 месяцев назад +4

      Japan's current working environment is not so bad.
      According to an OECD survey, the average working hours of Japanese people are shorter than those of Americans.

  • @Haseeb2k08
    @Haseeb2k08 Год назад +1

    Sad to see really! I remember when I was a kid all you wanted to have was, some of the top Japanese products eg Sony,Panasonic,Toshiba electronics.

    • @Embargoman
      @Embargoman Год назад

      Nowadays you see stores flooded with products made by Hisense, TCL, and Lenovo products well I am using a Lenovo product and yet their is another Chinese brand of TVs calls Oppo to say Chinese tech companies has replaced Japan, what you got their left is cameras, even that it might as well be dominated by Germans.
      Yet the world's fastest high speed rail belongs to China that even the Hyperloop train will be late in Japan, and South Korea will have Hyperloop trains before Japan does, yet Mitsubishi might not have their planes yet as COMAC will have launch the C919 plane and probably the day that Airbus move their headquarters to South Korea then to say between Mitsubishi and Airbus it will be that Airbus will be the official supplier for NASA, when Airbus acquires KAI and moves their headquarters to South Korea and yet the next Fighter jet for the US Navy called the F21 will be made by Airbus in South Korea and Mobile, Alabama after Airbus acquires Korean Aerospace Industries and move HQ to South Korea then Airbus will take over American contracts and replaces Boeing as the official contracter for the US government, including NASA will have Airbus as the official supplier for NASA on the day that Airbus move their HQ to South Korea.

  • @markgriessie3697
    @markgriessie3697 9 месяцев назад +1

    Trust me, the immigrant part is a good thing. You dont want arabs or africans ruin the peacefull japanese life

  • @noxnox7445
    @noxnox7445 Год назад +15

    You say it's only in Japan, but it's a problem in the developed world.
    Let's learn more and see the world.

    • @Kushenable
      @Kushenable 11 месяцев назад

      exactly... the whole world is standing still for 30-40 years... health care is getting worse, food is getting worse, water quality is getting worse, schooling is getting worse, infrastructure is getting worse... nothing rly gets any better but electronics (in a slow rate... like a snail... google how old 4k is... just one example).

    • @a.s.1737
      @a.s.1737 11 месяцев назад +2

      Ok but this isn't a video about the entire world. If you want to talk about another country, make a video about it yourself.

  • @shunnybunny
    @shunnybunny Год назад +5

    GDP growth GDP growth. That is all we talk about in the US. But is that everything? Have we consider crime rate? Life expectancy? Poverty? Happiness? And most importantly quality of life

    • @blackbelt2000
      @blackbelt2000 Год назад +2

      yes and they all suck in jpn.

    • @understone86
      @understone86 11 месяцев назад

      I mean not so much violent crime, many more sophisticated swindle and such... Long life expectancy is only for this last old generation, since if they run out of caregivers soon the elders wouldn't live for 90+ years living alone. The pensions going down for sure, so not quite sure how they will pay for the nursing home service and many people going to grow old without family and kids. Poverty rate is actually rising steeply. For long time Japan has one of the highest rates of suicide in the world. Quality of life, what does it mean?

    • @familiasosa6379
      @familiasosa6379 10 месяцев назад

      @@blackbelt2000 Japan is one of the safest coountires in the world

    • @jacquesmassard9226
      @jacquesmassard9226 26 дней назад

      don't worry Japan also ranks low in happiness too. like below Kazakhstan. USA is in the top 15. Finland and Denmark are at the top of the lists in happiness.

  • @keurikeuri7851
    @keurikeuri7851 9 месяцев назад +1

    I have always even now still believe in the good quality of Japanese products. I have my first TV a JVC 14 inch CRT TV which I bought in the 1990s and is still working today. So I was surprised that now some of those Japanese products are no longer that good. My uncle bought a Sony Bravia way back and after a year it had a line in its screen and after a few years it just stop working. I look into forums for some help that's when I learned that Sony TVs had been labeled as a '1 year TV'. I still believe in other Japanese brands but not in Sony anymore.

  • @kylekylelam3870
    @kylekylelam3870 3 месяца назад

    As a Hong Konger, I can clearly see that Tokyo and Japan is regaining its place financially Hong Kong is losing his place. Capital is flowing back to Japan.

  • @darthpapa696
    @darthpapa696 11 месяцев назад +2

    Little did they know that Japan are secretly one of the leading firearms and military tech industries.

    • @mitch20003
      @mitch20003 11 месяцев назад

      and one of the most advanced in tech, this youtuber is seriously a dumb ass , he doesnt cite anything . I looked up mutiple lists. I love proving know-it alls wrong. People like this spread false info. Some stuff they are backwards but tech is not one of them. most people are sheep and cant dyor, they're dumb and listen to anything a youtuber says

  • @johnnyw6467
    @johnnyw6467 11 месяцев назад +2

    So no one touching topic on Plaza Accord that lead to Japan economy decline?

  • @fy1654
    @fy1654 11 месяцев назад +1

    The problem started with the plaza agreement signed with USA

  • @groslait7814
    @groslait7814 11 месяцев назад +11

    japan is doing fine with current situation, japan doesn’t need capitalism growth .

  • @xOmniCloudx
    @xOmniCloudx 10 месяцев назад +3

    Japan used to be amazing to me but it gets less interesting and more disappointing as I age. It's cool to visit, especially when you're under 30 but, after that it just comes off as a child refusing to ever grow up while I moved on from almost everything about it I once found interesting.
    Not surprised China and Thailand usurped it in interest for me over the years seeing that. Still, I'm grateful for the memories and it playing a huge part in who I came to be, especially as a traveler, historian and linguist.

  • @duanenavarre7234
    @duanenavarre7234 10 месяцев назад +2

    japan sits on the ring of fire, geothermal like iceland would help, I think aquaculture would help as well.
    they import almost all their oil so algae based vertical hydroponic oil would help, and make a lot of the
    industry geared toward their youth. immigration could help if done carefully, not like EU.

    • @user-jl1zm2iy2b
      @user-jl1zm2iy2b 9 месяцев назад

      Algae oil is considered a viable option. It's estimated that if all sewage treatment plants were equipped with the device, it could meet 100% of Japan's domestic demand.

  • @robertshuxley
    @robertshuxley 11 месяцев назад

    great high quality video

  • @kaunas88
    @kaunas88 11 месяцев назад +6

    To those who say the solution is to grow the population, what they are saying is that the population should grow towards infinity forever to avoid the day of reckoning when population stabilization will bring government budgetary pain. Japan is crowded enough.

    • @mikexhotmail
      @mikexhotmail 11 месяцев назад +1

      Indeed.

    • @jacquesmassard9226
      @jacquesmassard9226 26 дней назад

      thousands of empty house all over japan tokyo is crowded japan is soon to be mostly empty.

  • @SippingTea2x
    @SippingTea2x 11 месяцев назад +1

    Your videos are exquisite 🤌 you and your team must work hard❤ much love, keep up the amazing work👊🏾

  • @johnsmith-gp4pe
    @johnsmith-gp4pe 11 месяцев назад +2

    Many of them got isekaid