Why Japan's Shrinking Economy Is Stuck in the ‘90s | WSJ

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  • Опубліковано 7 січ 2025

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  • @wsj
    @wsj  7 місяців тому +90

    Japan data confirms first currency intervention since 2022: on.wsj.com/3X9gaex

    • @bronson4574
      @bronson4574 7 місяців тому +4

      I understand the point of the video, but surely it isn't growing because of the negative interest rate...

    • @maknyc1539
      @maknyc1539 7 місяців тому +5

      4th largest economy is great, it doesn't need infinite growth to prosper.

    • @duckmercy11
      @duckmercy11 5 місяців тому

      @@wsj Good stuff

  • @GURken
    @GURken 7 місяців тому +3220

    When everybody lived in 1980, Japan already lived in 2000
    When everybody lived in 2020, Japan still lived in 2000

    • @w1s86
      @w1s86 7 місяців тому +179

      Are you sure the 2020s are better than 2000?

    • @kimjongoof5000
      @kimjongoof5000 7 місяців тому +130

      ​@@w1s86Not sending Americans to fight in Iraq/Afghanistan and global decrease in poverty is a big one

    • @Nswix
      @Nswix 7 місяців тому +25

      @@kimjongoof5000idk. I had fun in Iraq...

    • @dd3715
      @dd3715 7 місяців тому

      They still have high speed trains and can send spacecraft to distant asteroid. How many countries "living in 2020" can achieve that? Or by "living in 2020" you mean by gender ideology, racism, overmigration and so on.

    • @geoms6263
      @geoms6263 7 місяців тому +13

      And when the Japanese were cannibals during the world war ..... where were we?🤔

  • @klanowicz
    @klanowicz 7 місяців тому +2194

    It's simple.
    Japan is extremely bureaucratic.
    Companies value age over skills and pretending to be busy over being productive.
    It destroys innovation.

    • @havencat9337
      @havencat9337 7 місяців тому +70

      its simple...Japan its not independent country since they have a huge american military. so whatever decisions they make they are done in the interest of americans. Just see what Plaza accord is.

    • @olska9498
      @olska9498 7 місяців тому +270

      @@havencat9337 South Korea and Singapore also have American military but they don't suffer from bureaucracy like Japan does. So your argument is extremely dumb and you should think before you write.

    • @alastairhimmer1916
      @alastairhimmer1916 7 місяців тому

      Exactly. All the Japanese have mastered is the illusion of industry and now the chickens are coming home to roost.

    • @buildmotosykletist1987
      @buildmotosykletist1987 7 місяців тому +27

      Ridiculous comment. Easily debunked by search.

    • @Patricia-cn7ox
      @Patricia-cn7ox 7 місяців тому +32

      @@olska9498south korea and Singapour have a different kind of US intervention. Japan was punished to make them dependent of the US, they were riddled with american propaganda, the high consumption of bread despite how wheat doesnt even grow in japan is one of the most transparent exemples.

  • @andrewondon
    @andrewondon 7 місяців тому +1176

    Japan's stubbornness to stick to tradition is also the same reason why they are so fascinating to us outsiders

    • @missplainjane3905
      @missplainjane3905 7 місяців тому +16

      What is fascinating

    • @seiji6195
      @seiji6195 7 місяців тому +64

      @trevorwebb448 you can keep your traditions while at least upgrading your useless bureaucracy no one talks about changing their culture or whatever

    • @barexampasser
      @barexampasser 7 місяців тому +53

      @trevorwebb448yup. They don’t import people with different values that destroy their culture for “MUH GDP!!!!!!1!!”. Some things are more important than having a constantly growing economy at the expense of your society.

    • @zuesadam7143
      @zuesadam7143 7 місяців тому +39

      ​@@barexampasser but it is at the expense of their society
      Their birth rate is plummeting and the Yen is unstable
      Nothing is static, the Japanese from today would be unrecognisable to the Japanese from the 1900s,
      They have made changes before and they need to do it again if they're planning on sticking around but implementing changes that suits and works for them.

    • @mikermiks5784
      @mikermiks5784 7 місяців тому +8

      @trevorwebb448 it's called racism

  • @cw214
    @cw214 7 місяців тому +423

    In most of Japan, the trains run on time, the service at any establishment, no matter high end or low end, can be counted on to be decent and pleasant, the streets are clean and incredibly safe, you can walk anywhere alone at night without looking over your shoulder, you can take care of most of your errands at the convenience stores that are everywhere, the food is good and affordable at most restaurants, and housing is much more affordable than most cities in the west. I would take this over some measure of “efficiency” and “growth” made up by economists any day. Economists these days are just cheerleaders for the one percent.

    • @user-ye6ty9ie8g
      @user-ye6ty9ie8g 7 місяців тому +27

      Well said.

    • @vladys5238
      @vladys5238 6 місяців тому +76

      affordable by your western salaries standards... Japanese people work long hours and overtime to make ends meet and live in cramped spaces. These measures made up by economists unfortunately affect the little man more than the big capitalists.

    • @alexphelps7042
      @alexphelps7042 6 місяців тому

      Rigorous social conservatism isn’t all sunshine & rainbows. They have a nearly %100 criminal conviction rate, more xenophobia than fundy Christians, many businesses are weirdly afraid of objectively useful progress like debit cards & their suicide rates make America seem like an international paragon of mental healthcare

    • @cw214
      @cw214 6 місяців тому +23

      @@vladys5238 actually if you look at measures of housing and general affordability in comparison to wages, no Japanese city is even in the top 20. It’s mostly western cities with more “productive” economies lol.

    • @idromano
      @idromano 6 місяців тому +13

      "Economists these days are just cheerleaders for the one percent"

  • @wclee65
    @wclee65 7 місяців тому +400

    I was looking forward to this but disappointed by the shallow and stereotypical analysis. The more interesting question is whether Japan's course is really worse than what other countries have chosen. The US may have hyper-productivity and innovation but are the outcomes - economic and societal - really better than Japan's? I guess it depends on what is important to you. For me, I'd choose the balance of Japan's positives and negatives over those of the U.S. any day.

    • @cmt6997
      @cmt6997 7 місяців тому

      In 200 years, the US and Europe will be absolutely unrecognizable. But Japan will still be Japan.

    • @Valentin-oc5nh
      @Valentin-oc5nh 7 місяців тому +18

      working long hours everyday?

    • @mikea5745
      @mikea5745 7 місяців тому +68

      @@Valentin-oc5nh The average American worker works more hours per year than the average Japanese worker, according to OECD data
      The idea that Japanese workers have incredibly long hours is quite outdated. Similar to the incorrect notion that Japan has an exceptionally high suicide rate (their suicide rate is now markedly lower than the US)

    • @erikmagium6455
      @erikmagium6455 7 місяців тому +23

      But compare to european countries then. Germany is richer and more innovative and still has a good economical and societal situation.

    • @strawberrykun6136
      @strawberrykun6136 7 місяців тому +5

      I think if a country has low productivity, their economy is plunging, their workplace is overworked and disappointed. Then yes I would say it's going rather bad for you.

  • @maknyc1539
    @maknyc1539 7 місяців тому +390

    Japan is fine. You can't have infinite economic growth in a finite world. It's already richer than 190+ other countries. Keep in mind they have the highest life expectancy in the world still

    • @offeric
      @offeric 7 місяців тому +76

      I'm tired of this bs propaganda of "economy needs to grow"... f the economy

    • @NomanAhmed3
      @NomanAhmed3 7 місяців тому

      Yes, Western media biased

    • @मराठी.माणूस
      @मराठी.माणूस 7 місяців тому +45

      exactly. I have lived in Japan for many years with salary the same each year and I never felt anything missing from my life. In fact its their process oriented nature that helps keeps things working and stable, and I personally loved it.

    • @Lucas166silva
      @Lucas166silva 7 місяців тому +19

      That's a fine mindset, hate this bs, a lot of things are more important than being rich.

    • @JKLoans
      @JKLoans 7 місяців тому +9

      @@मराठी.माणूसabsolutely agree. I live here currently and while it took some getting used to, I certainly do love it.

  • @JM-gz1ej
    @JM-gz1ej 7 місяців тому +267

    Totally disagree on the Starbucks example. In US, most Starbucks with far fewer workers means longer waiting time for the customers. This same "efficiency" achieved by lowered service quality can be found in most retail establishments.

    • @theotryhard8651
      @theotryhard8651 7 місяців тому +29

      yea exactly, Japan provides far higher quality services.

    • @NN-pe6ip
      @NN-pe6ip 7 місяців тому +25

      This is why Japan is such a nice place to live, there is a trade-off between profit and quality, in the West things have gone too much in the opposite direction.

    • @mikami5799
      @mikami5799 7 місяців тому +4

      Yea he gave a bad example. The Japanese construction sites often requires unnecessary guards, even for smallest construction like refurbishment and even for the least populated area where no body is around.

    • @jefri4176
      @jefri4176 7 місяців тому +5

      Yeah super bad example on Starbucks. 😅

    • @MrDravous
      @MrDravous 7 місяців тому +5

      it's a bad example but a good point. mikami's about the guards is better. also the traffic directors for parking lots, or having 5 registers at a supermarket open when no one is in line. and these are just the customer facing ones we can see. think how many redundant jobs are there in all those buildings all over the cities.

  • @gr8st2323
    @gr8st2323 7 місяців тому +334

    The Starbucks comparison is the most hilarious thing I’ve heard in decades. Working at a Starbucks in the US SUCKS because of this way of thinking smh

    • @jorgeavelar98
      @jorgeavelar98 7 місяців тому +33

      Yet with the way the US operates, employees can see their wages increase a lot faster than they do in Japan. And dont be fooled, just b/c a Japan business has more employees does not mean theyre not overworked. Japan citizens are the second most overworked individuals on the planet on avg after Mexican citizens. So not only are wages not increasing in Japan, people still get overworked more so than the US....

    • @pibob7880
      @pibob7880 7 місяців тому +31

      Most insightful comment here. The obsession with high marginal productivity of labor in customer facing service industry makes the worker experience horrible in US and customer experience horrible in Europe

    • @BlindBison
      @BlindBison 7 місяців тому +24

      Agreed entirely, the focus on “worker productivity” has made a lot of jobs miserable to perform in the USA.
      His Starbucks example was indeed a very poor one when you consider the situation from the perspective of the employee on that floor and effects on turnover.
      Also charts of wage growth in the US versus Japan are worthless without a corresponding chart to show inflation rates. Japan has had relatively low inflation for awhile now and that’s relevant.
      Also surprisingly considering their land area constraints housing has not ballooned how it has here in the US in recent times. This video seems to want to paint Japan as a dinosaur but in many many ways they’ve got a great thing going seems to me. Low crime to boot.

    • @wallstreettrader1
      @wallstreettrader1 7 місяців тому +3

      ​@jorgeavelar98 I have worked alongside Mexicans here in the US since the 80s in Chicago. Got tired of having to do their work and mine. Their work ethic is a myth.

    • @JP-kp9kh
      @JP-kp9kh 7 місяців тому +4

      Housing market depressed in Japan because of population decline. But i agree with you. Low inflation has been a boon for the workers. Only the capitalists of the WSJ complain

  • @bingobongo1615
    @bingobongo1615 7 місяців тому +30

    The irony of this video looking like it was made 30 years ago…

  • @leeswecho
    @leeswecho 7 місяців тому +323

    The video fails to acknowledge what seems to be the elephant in _every_ room these days, which is *China* .
    Even in the 90's it was already known that Japan was a "two speed economy -- a globally competitive export-facing economy subsidizing an inefficient domestic one." Mr. Koll's anecdote about Japanese fax machines has been repeated by historians and economists ad nauseum for decades now.
    The difference now is that Japan's bread and butter export industries have been slowly displaced by the rising boats of first the Koreans (Samsung, LG, Hyundai) and the Taiwanese (TSMC, Foxconn) and now by 1.4 billion Chinese.
    The US has avoided this fate mainly by fleeing to higher ground, to the labor-rate-insensitive knowledge-worker industries of the Magnificent Seven, but there are only a limited number of such jobs (even with the US nearly monopolizing these industries in the global economy), which are leading to the US' signature problem today -- a limited quantity of extremely lucrative jobs creating a shortlist of crammed, overpriced, gentrified cities, leading to mass suffering and inequality.

    • @christine_notchristina
      @christine_notchristina 7 місяців тому +5

      wow, i would love to learn more about what you said. it's very interesting. if you dont mind, could u please elaborate more or point me to a direction where I can learn more about this? Thank youuu!

    • @leeswecho
      @leeswecho 7 місяців тому +28

      @@christine_notchristina there's not a lot I can do in UA-cam comments, but certainly there are two phrases which you can look up to find more of what I am referring to here. The first is _"Rise of the Rest"_ , coined by Fareed Zakaria in his book of the same name, describing the process of what China and the rest of the BRICS are doing in the world economy. The second is _"Dual Economy"_ , coined by Richard Katz in his book "Japan: The System That Soured" (which, notably, was published in 1998).

    • @farzana6676
      @farzana6676 7 місяців тому +3

      ​@@leeswecho Robots with AI are going to reshore manufacturing back to the USA.

    • @jjsamuelgunn1136
      @jjsamuelgunn1136 7 місяців тому +13

      @@farzana6676 A probable scenario. But like you said it is manufacturing. Not manufacturing JOBS. How are the American people going to buy the stuff being manufactured by robots if they don't have jobs, or even fewer jobs. I still haven't figured out the conundrum. Robots and AI will take over many of the physical labor as well as knowledge based jobs.

    • @nikolaizaicev9297
      @nikolaizaicev9297 7 місяців тому +7

      Respect, finally someone in a commentry section, who has at least read the works of Adam Smith and Ricardo.
      The only mistake you made is in case of US. It did not avoided this fate, it just prints money and uses it to buy the goods while at the same time, investing some of it into financial sector's blob.
      As long as US$ is the main currency in the world's trade, US will consume large part of goods produced abroad, and does not need to worry about having a competitive economy or anything like that.
      Thus, it is not because of the magnificant seven that there are no jobs, it is because most of the money and investitions is sucked into financial markets for speculations, etc, not into real sector of economy. Thus, one trully needs only a limited number of brokers, bankers, etc not so many as in case of factories, etc.

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    @nicolasbenson009 Місяць тому +1037

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      @tatianastarcic Місяць тому +1

      Despite utilizing the correct strategies and possessing the right assets, there can still be variations in the investment returns among different investors. It is important to acknowledge that experience plays a crucial role in investment success. Personally, I realized the significance of this and sought the guidance of a market analyst, which enabled me to substantially grow my account to nearly a million. I strategically withdrew my profits just before the market correction, and now I am taking advantage of the buying opportunities once again.

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      @JacobsErick-u8r Місяць тому +2

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      @tatianastarcic Місяць тому +1

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      @sharonwinson-m8g Місяць тому +1

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  • @just3rr
    @just3rr 7 місяців тому +36

    Part of this is also due to how US impose Japanese technology products to be priced same as US and Europe products in 90s. Since the Asian market are looking for cheap products, of course, Japanese lost their markets since their products, to this day, is difficult to enter those countries who imposed these condition on Japan. Asian countries then see Chinese made products being cheaper, even though some of the brands are from the US and Europe, of course they would buy it.
    As time goes on, Chinese got the skills uplifted from massively producing US and Europe digital products, leading to steadily create their own products with much cheaper price. This further leads Japanese losing their markets. So, who should be blame on this? Japan? China? Of course, it is those who always imposing whatever on countries they deemed a threat (to be frank, it would be US).
    Then, US argue that they do that to 'safeguarding' the principle of free market. What a load of BS, if I could say. When they see certain country comes up with cheaper products with quality rivals theirs, they will do everything to stop them. Then, why don't they create cheaper products than them? Then, they will argue that to cover the cost since they pay their worker 'fairly'. They will always trying to justify themselves even though what they are justifying is unjust.

  • @BureaucracyWorld
    @BureaucracyWorld 7 місяців тому +30

    The US wanted Japan to fail since the 90's when the Yen value was so high for Americans to afford to buy Japanese cars. The US then asked Japan to drop its currency value down to almost nothing. So Americans can afford to buy Toyotas. Since then, the Yen has never gained it value.
    That's how America get rid off its competition.
    Do America want the EU to fail? The answer is YES.

  • @えいえい-b9n
    @えいえい-b9n 7 місяців тому +220

    As a person having japanese dad and Amerian mother, and living in Japan right now, I would say it is fact Japan has some outdated custome in business. but honestly, I found it unique, and interesting. I enjoy the diffrence. I feel like if entrie world focus on productivity and discard uniqueness, the world would be more boring.

    • @richardconway6425
      @richardconway6425 7 місяців тому +13

      Definitely. I'm English and I would absolutely love to spend some time in Japan. It's of course so different, but endlessly fascinating. And, let's not forget, there are many things the Japanese do *really* well, better than everyone else, in fact. Like trains, to name but one.
      I love the fact that they have these rich cultural traditions that we discarded decades, if not centuries ago.
      We should celebrate our differences, but make an effort to understand why we are different.

    • @serebii666
      @serebii666 7 місяців тому +14

      " I found it unique, and interesting." Congrats, now you know how the tourists of the 19th and 20th centuries felt when visiting backwards nations - It is what fueled exoticism, including orientalism. Later on, these sentiments justified imperialism against these places - on the grounds that the people there were did not deserve to rule themselves if they were incapable of modernizing. That is how Japan itself rationalized colonizing Korea and later China.
      As Paul Krugman said “Productivity isn’t everything, but in the long run, it’s almost everything.” - As a metric productivity is the key to a country's prosperity and standard of living. And for Japan, they have stagnated for the past 2 generations. Even former Socialist countries in Eastern Europe have already reached or surpassed Japan here. And that is not good news for Japan's future, since it's population will only get older, requiring even more investment and focus on that aging cohort, which will only increase pressure on younger generations. We already see from the low birthrates and closing schools, higher tax burdens and labour shortages, dying countrysides and lack of innovation that Japan's standard of living is diminishing.

    • @vlhc4642
      @vlhc4642 7 місяців тому +3

      Too bad the locals who can't afford to travel because Yen fell 50% can't experience the difference.

    • @David-ud9ju
      @David-ud9ju 7 місяців тому +19

      @@serebii666 Lol, what?

    • @rafaryuga18
      @rafaryuga18 7 місяців тому

      exactly, just see how china running anything as fast as possible, it comes with price of losing identity

  • @CorncropTv
    @CorncropTv 7 місяців тому +172

    Keep the quality up Japan, it matters to a lot of people. If the alternative is overpriced, fragile junk that will end up in landfills or recalled then I wouldn't say that's a worthy alternative to strive for.

    • @Western_Decline
      @Western_Decline 7 місяців тому +3

      the alternative to floppy disks is better, i promise

    • @keithmartin1328
      @keithmartin1328 7 місяців тому +3

      Absolutely correct. I have several Japanese made products, including my 14 year old Toyota, they are all of good quality.

    • @SASMADBRUV7
      @SASMADBRUV7 7 місяців тому

      ​@keithmartin1328 so you still use floppy disks then?

  • @maholob3302
    @maholob3302 7 місяців тому +21

    Suicide rates are higher in the United States.
    Working hours are also higher in the U.S.
    Mental illness rates are also higher in the U.S.

  • @maxb306
    @maxb306 7 місяців тому +393

    japan's way of doing things also allows them to have a MUCH larger middle class than the US

    • @livwake
      @livwake 7 місяців тому +45

      No point having money if there’s no time to enjoy it

    • @mehg8407
      @mehg8407 7 місяців тому +74

      @@livwake Tell that to the hundreds of thousands of homeless people here in the US. The millions that can barely afford rent. The millions that can't pay medical bills. Not to mention the majority of the country that can't even afford a $1K emergency.

    • @gimei-chan
      @gimei-chan 7 місяців тому +3

      so what's the issue if more people are rich than middle class? Wouldn't you wanna be rich than stay middle class?

    • @mehg8407
      @mehg8407 7 місяців тому +26

      @@gimei-chan so what's the issue if more people are rich than middle class?
      Because it will spiral into what we have in the US today. A few rich people and a whole bunch of poor people that have to live on the street.
      >Wouldn't you wanna be rich than stay middle class?
      People always assume they would be on the winning end of a society of few winners and a majority of losers. Statistically speaking, your odds of being well off are low in that kind of society (see US).

    • @gimei-chan
      @gimei-chan 7 місяців тому +8

      @@mehg8407 That's just false. US has seen increase in number of rich people, meaning people have moved from middle class to rich. What the US calls "poor" is actually a very high bar, even for japan. Of course, when the mean is moved higher, more people will count in the 2nd quartile, but that's just how statistics work; it doesn't mean those people are way worse than before.

  • @dixonbuttes6564
    @dixonbuttes6564 7 місяців тому +24

    Japan is even moving away from sewing machines, which they are/were a global leader in -- and have set the entire standard for sewing machines that make all of our clothes. What happens when Japan moves away from holding supremacy in that space will be interesting. No one makes metal parts as precisely as Japan on such a mass scale. Your clothing was sewn on a Japanese sewing machine ... as soon as they lose interest in their process-centricity and "obsolete technologies" like mechanical sewing machines, the quality of clothing and sewn goods dies and //you// naked. Think about it. Support Japan, buy Japanese, and stop the over-emphasis on virtual technologies, rather than tangible ones. Japan needs tech diversification and a way to retain the old while integrating the new. Humanity is dependent on Japanese reliability and innovation. Praise and respect to Japan!!!

  • @jamesmccarty8988
    @jamesmccarty8988 7 місяців тому +97

    I have visited Japan many times. Unlike my hometown in the USA, the streets are clean (no litter, feces, needles, tents, comatose drug addicts) and safe, people are polite and the trains run on time. We have nothing to be smug about.

    • @MiguelDLewis
      @MiguelDLewis 7 місяців тому +12

      You've never lived in Nagoya then. The streets are clean, but you go by the train tracks, there's liter everywhere. The bridges are rusting away from lack of maintenance and the malls looks like ghost towns. Women of the night line the streets, many of them underage Yakuza girls. What Japan lacks in street liter and addicts, it makes up for in urban decay and human trafficking.

    • @agoodchow
      @agoodchow 7 місяців тому

      Both Japan and USA are in trouble.

    • @MiguelDLewis
      @MiguelDLewis 7 місяців тому +4

      @@missplainjane3905 Other places are nice, especially places catered to tourists. I never saw any liter in Nara, Kyoto, or Tokyo.

    • @MiguelDLewis
      @MiguelDLewis 7 місяців тому +4

      @a1sauce775 "I am black and beautiful."
      - Song of Solomon 1:5🙏🏾✝📖

    • @MiguelDLewis
      @MiguelDLewis 7 місяців тому +1

      @@missplainjane3905 Nah I've been to Iga too but I wasn't there very long.

  • @thetroyzernator
    @thetroyzernator 7 місяців тому +385

    Makes you realise that if Japan can have such a large and advanced economy with so many fundamental inefficiencies, their best days could really be ahead with all of the low hanging-fruit.
    Just need a proper reform movement.

    • @josehawking5293
      @josehawking5293 7 місяців тому +34

      They are doing just fine, unlike a lot of Americans strung out on a sidewalk near you.🤔

    • @allesarfint
      @allesarfint 7 місяців тому +37

      Japan and reform are like water and oil

    • @vlhc4642
      @vlhc4642 7 місяців тому

      Japan's problem is they believe their economy is advanced while using fax machines.
      The first thing they need to do to move forward is to acknowledge their economy is neither advanced nor large.

    • @theotheleo6830
      @theotheleo6830 7 місяців тому +33

      I don't think so. Their population is aging quickly, their birthrate has decreased to the point of unsustainability, and they are averse to immigration.

    • @sarkaranish
      @sarkaranish 7 місяців тому +23

      @@josehawking5293 they're not doing "fine" they are in so much debt they are on the brink of collapse

  • @mikesautiere8290
    @mikesautiere8290 7 місяців тому +272

    Yet, living in Japan is more pleasant and safe than in any other western places...

    • @anonymous_person-iv4pw
      @anonymous_person-iv4pw 7 місяців тому +46

      ur not wrong yet video is also right

    • @Ex.zed.
      @Ex.zed. 7 місяців тому +13

      And it's still backward on so many levels!

    • @missplainjane3905
      @missplainjane3905 7 місяців тому +4

      @@Ex.zed.
      What other things

    • @missplainjane3905
      @missplainjane3905 7 місяців тому +2

      @@anonymous_person-iv4pw
      You live there

    • @itsmini6175
      @itsmini6175 7 місяців тому +11

      I’d argue the Scandinavian countries like Sweden and Norway also provide a pleasant experience while utilizing modern technologies

  • @kazkazimierz1742
    @kazkazimierz1742 7 місяців тому +20

    I remember when back in the 90s Japan was going to take over the world economy.

  • @torpedospurs
    @torpedospurs 7 місяців тому +55

    All correct. But don't forget the Americans forcing Japan to double the value of the Yen in 1985, leading them towards their crazy real estate and stock market bubbles of the late 1980s.

    • @SASMADBRUV7
      @SASMADBRUV7 7 місяців тому +2

      Tbf I'm not sure how that relates to some of the issues like this which Japan now has

    • @user-co5ri8dp_978
      @user-co5ri8dp_978 7 місяців тому

      ​@@SASMADBRUV7 That's why Japan's Ministry of Finance and media to support interest-rate increase, tax hike, a stronger yen and deflation. It is often said that there are many traitors in Japan's Ministry of Finance and in politicians.

    • @CausticLemons7
      @CausticLemons7 7 місяців тому

      The Japanese bubble was there regardless of the Plaza Accord, and their government continued pumping money into the economy for years even when the bubble was bursting.

    • @Dan16673
      @Dan16673 6 місяців тому

      Huh? Usa didn't do that but they did screw them in the 90s

  • @qwertyqart
    @qwertyqart 7 місяців тому +54

    When wsj criticizes you for being not productive, that is a compliment

    • @exfinen_2919
      @exfinen_2919 7 місяців тому

      WSJ "productive" defined is at 1:43 , GDP(USD)/Hours-Worked, so if worked too long then that's lower productivity.

    • @SomeLazyDr
      @SomeLazyDr 7 місяців тому +1

      No wonder service is so much better in Japan - if you've got five people getting things done at Starbucks, that means you will actually get treated more than just a number as a customer.

    • @SASMADBRUV7
      @SASMADBRUV7 7 місяців тому

      ​@SomeLazyDr you don't understand what productivity is

    • @Isaactorres60
      @Isaactorres60 7 місяців тому

      Exactly, according to them we should sacrifice our lives just to be productive for Wall Street, no.

    • @qwertyqart
      @qwertyqart 7 місяців тому

      @@SASMADBRUV7 I think, I might. from my vantage point, it is revenue per employ.

  • @evertqin
    @evertqin 7 місяців тому +69

    The wage in the US has increased 150%+, but most Americans are not getting richer. It is because of the high inflation and the wealth transfer from the poor to the rich,

    • @jorgeavelar98
      @jorgeavelar98 7 місяців тому +8

      accounting for inflation, wages have kept up in the US. that is not the case everywhere else. the US seems to be the only country in the entire planet where wages grow along with productivity

    • @nouvelhomme8990
      @nouvelhomme8990 7 місяців тому +4

      Most people are richer. You are lying.

    • @wallstreettrader1
      @wallstreettrader1 7 місяців тому

      ​@@jorgeavelar98Wrong again. You need to study economics, then you'll be able to keep up on here

    • @teamtoken
      @teamtoken 7 місяців тому

      @@wallstreettrader1​​⁠
      Median Disposable Per capita income (PPP adjusted)
      *US* (2nd): $48,625
      *Japan* (24th): $24,855
      What did they get wrong?

    • @pepper0075
      @pepper0075 7 місяців тому

      @@nouvelhomme8990wrong

  • @rick-yo
    @rick-yo 7 місяців тому +6

    My observation is Japan prioritizes social stability foremost. This includes over employing workers even at low wages overall and trying to support workers at the expense of the bottom line. At least citizens have their basic needs met especially with their good national healthcare. Compared to the US companies that easily fire employees to appease shareholders and staggering displays of homelessness and citizens struggling w healthcare needs/costs. So we need to ask “what’s the point of just focusing on efficiency?”

  • @kaztakashi
    @kaztakashi 7 місяців тому +35

    Unlike in Japan, the conditions behind high productivity allow workers to be laid off quickly. Land prices are too high, and rental rooms are too expensive for them to afford. They cannot get proper medical care, and if they fall ill, they are immediately fired and end up at the bottom of society. I don't want advice from a country where former workers are roaming the streets like zombies in droves.

    • @vincesnake5886
      @vincesnake5886 6 місяців тому +1

      High productivity comes with innovation too, not just labour mobility. You can choose both wealth and social cohesion, some European countries are good at it.

  • @vasilikonstan
    @vasilikonstan 7 місяців тому +5

    4:16 There are more employees working in Starbucks in major cities all over the world, not just in Japan. In Tokyo, for example, coffee shops can be extremely busy, with constant lines. As such, more staff is needed. Starbucks is a profit-hungry corporation, and are not prone to overstaffing for no reason. Duh.

  • @Aar69
    @Aar69 7 місяців тому +21

    Japan should not listen to foreign critics. A bustling economy, on paper, isn't the mighty end all be all. Strides for perfect efficiency have destroyed so much of the good we have here in the west, where all of our goods have turned into junk quality trash, and an economic environment that feels sickly despite markets being at "all time highs". Companies here work very hard to redefine US culture, with pride. Companies there work hard to respect and oblige by Japanese culture. Companies here have a price-gouging attitude of "the right price is the highest someone is willing to pay for it". In Japan, they practice self restraint. Your prices for goods don't fluctuate regardless of whether you're in or out of the airport, in the heart of a busy city, or out in the country.
    Let Japan address their own issues in accordance with their values.

    • @team3am149
      @team3am149 7 місяців тому +1

      Leave it to Americans to always think the grass is greener on the other side. Companies in Japan don’t “respect and oblige by Japanese culture”, they are just as fiercely materialistic and shallow as anyone else. You seem to have some sort of rosy picture where companies can have these idealistic values and still be competitive. Go search up some of the Japanese corruption or shady and appalling business practices.

    • @Aar69
      @Aar69 7 місяців тому +2

      @@team3am149 Firstly, I am Japanese American. Secondly, I have observed many of these differences and attitudes from businesses myself. I am not saying that Japanese businesses are without blemish, but there very much is a clear difference in how companies make decisions and how they behave towards Japanese consumers versus the states.

    • @missplainjane3905
      @missplainjane3905 7 місяців тому

      @@Aar69
      You have work there sir, what are the differences ?

  • @2Kriss2Kross
    @2Kriss2Kross 7 місяців тому +181

    This is was a waste of 5 minutes. 🙄Japan is worse than US because stamps and fax machines? Okay but their citizens enjoy clean streets, excellent public transportation, and don’t worry about being drowned in educational and healthcare debt and not being shot down while going grocery shopping.

    • @museli_addict
      @museli_addict 6 місяців тому +9

      It was a question of productivity, and stifling bureaucracy.
      Japanese people are awesome, and will remain awesome with more efficient processes if implemented.
      Singapore has great productivity and still retains a great culture for comparison.

    • @Dan16673
      @Dan16673 6 місяців тому +5

      Usa has culture issues

    • @Bluespicygreen
      @Bluespicygreen 6 місяців тому +8

      @@Dan16673true, right wing culture is killing the potential for awesome public transportation and universal healthcare.

    • @cv5369
      @cv5369 6 місяців тому +3

      @@BluespicygreenJapan by nature, political and cultural POV is right wing

    • @easyhlife8021
      @easyhlife8021 6 місяців тому +1

      Us it's company not country

  • @まんごー-m7u
    @まんごー-m7u 7 місяців тому +4

    As a Japanese, I think it’s difficult to have a balance between tradition and efficiency. Overall I’m really proud of my culture and how safe is.

  • @kplay12
    @kplay12 7 місяців тому +112

    Did you guys forget to color grade the video?

    • @dezainaa
      @dezainaa 7 місяців тому +2

      thought the same

    • @creativemindplay
      @creativemindplay 7 місяців тому +15

      No, it was intentional

    • @johannes_keeper
      @johannes_keeper 7 місяців тому +5

      Maybe it's intentional, to give some old vibes.

    • @muhammadfareezrashdan6988
      @muhammadfareezrashdan6988 5 місяців тому +1

      I think the intern edit this video.

    • @marcuscanning3843
      @marcuscanning3843 5 місяців тому

      Doubt it's intentional - I think theres a bit of stock footage at 3:02 which IS colour graded (probably because it wasn't downloadable in log)

  • @SeanTalkoff
    @SeanTalkoff 7 місяців тому +141

    It's sad how difficult things have become in the present generation. I was wondering how to utilise some money I had. I used some of it for e-commerce business, but that sank. I'm thinking of how to use what's left to invest, but I don't really know which way to go.

    • @SteveDutton-v
      @SteveDutton-v 7 місяців тому +6

      Find stocks with yields that exceed the market and stocks that, at the very least, follow the long-term market trend. However, you should get guidance from a financial advisor if you want to create a successful long-term plan...

    • @PASCALDAB
      @PASCALDAB 7 місяців тому +5

      Yeah, financial advisors could make a lot of difference, particularly in a market such as this. Stocks are pretty unstable at the moment, but if you do the right math, you should be just fine. Bloomberg and other finance media have been recording cases of folks gaining over 250k just in a matter of weeks/couple months, so I think there are a lot of wealth transfer in this downtime if you know where to look. I have been using an FA since 2019, and I return at least $121k ROI, and this does not include capital gain.

    • @PASCALDAB
      @PASCALDAB 7 місяців тому +2

      My CFA ’’ Sharon Ann Meny, a renowned figure in her line of work. I recommend researching her credentials further. She has many years of experience and is a valuable resource for anyone looking to navigate the financial market..!

  • @Kgjoha
    @Kgjoha 7 місяців тому +13

    If Japan's economy is so bad, why is so much of Japan better that the US? Big cities are extremely clean, almost no homeless, very little crime, longer life expectancy, easy and affordable public transportation. Is dollar per hour output what is important about a country?

    • @darthutah6649
      @darthutah6649 7 місяців тому +2

      American companies typically strive for efficiency. Meanwhile, urban development is oftentimes hamstrung by preservationists who want to preserve landmarks and neighborhood character.
      Japan is the opposite of this. You have all of the issues with corporate culture but the national government sets a zoning code and development is much easier in Japan than in the US (which is saying something because Japan has strict earthquake standards). As a result, NYC is filled with buildings from the early 20th century while Tokyo is cutting edge. Housing is notably more affordable in Japan than in the US because Japan keeps on building.

    • @dezainaa
      @dezainaa 7 місяців тому

      But overall, all service speed in Japan feels at least x2 as efficient as in the US. Waiting time at the grocery cashier or on the phone in the US are ridiculous. People just don't get paid enough in Japan for what they do.

    • @Sacto1654
      @Sacto1654 7 місяців тому

      @@darthutah6649 Tokyo has embraced modern buildings because of *TWO* bad experiences with large scale fires last century: the 1923 Great Kantō Earthquake and the infamous firebombing raid of March 9-10, 1945. That's why it's just about impossible to find wooden structures in Tokyo that pre-date World War II.

    • @darthutah6649
      @darthutah6649 7 місяців тому +1

      @@Sacto1654 It was a choice of Japan as a whole to move into the modern. Western European cities were devastated in WWII but were pretty much rebuilt the way they were before the war. This contrasts with Warsaw which was completely destroyed and rebuilt in the soviet image.

    • @nisher15
      @nisher15 7 місяців тому +1

      GDP is a very poor metric to use. There is no such thing as infinite parabolic growth forever in a world with finite resources. Stability and prosperity is a better metric.

  • @GaganNarhe
    @GaganNarhe 7 місяців тому +28

    This is what makes Japan's culture rich.
    Can't believe they have listed in this video all the good things about any civilization and calling it bad.
    American obsession with infinite growth is going to doom the whole world.

    • @maheshrathod5593
      @maheshrathod5593 7 місяців тому +3

      I Like Japanese culture

    • @havencat9337
      @havencat9337 7 місяців тому +5

      they killed millions of people and area very cruel civilization - also they build temples for those criminals ofwar... and neve apologised fully (given that they are known for deep apology when it comes to the WW2 they did very very small gestures) . ask the Koreans, Chinese, Philipine and others in Asia. IMO their culture should be reformed and surpassed.

    • @FullLengthInterstates
      @FullLengthInterstates 7 місяців тому +9

      If they stop the negative press on Japan, Americans might start to question why we can't all live in a big, safe city and live to 84 years old while making only $33,000

    • @austinduke8876
      @austinduke8876 7 місяців тому +5

      My opinion of Japan was that the worst thing was the fertility rate. If that country could stabilize at like 2.3 TFR somehow Japan would be the gold standard for how to be a nation state in the modern world

    • @serebii666
      @serebii666 7 місяців тому

      Forcing people to come into the office to stamp a document instead of using a digital certificate like everyone else in the world is what makes Japan's culture rich? Maintaining a business culture where looking busy instead of streamlining problem solving and paying out dividends instead of investing in R&D is what makes Japan's culture rich? Enduring sexism and terrible working culture creating non-existent work-life-balances, plummeting birthrates and karoshi is what makes Japan's culture rich? You think all of these things are the best Japanese civilization has to offer?

  • @_orodrigofernandes
    @_orodrigofernandes 7 місяців тому +8

    I know this is WSJ but life and culture ain't all about making money.
    Let Japan be a one of kind in piece.
    There is still the rest of the world to do as the rest of the world does...

    • @Scottagram
      @Scottagram 7 місяців тому

      Life ain't about working ridiculous hours either. Japan would have more time for culture if they cleaned up their inefficiencies

  • @-.TS.-
    @-.TS.- 7 місяців тому +7

    The stamp is interesting how Japan uses old technology to avoid foreign hackers

  • @AlexanderNewman-v1x
    @AlexanderNewman-v1x 7 місяців тому +4

    Japan's population has been getting older and has dropped. They are doing perfectly fine considering the deflation this causes.
    Economic growth based on unlimited population growth is unsustainable.

  • @FullLengthInterstates
    @FullLengthInterstates 7 місяців тому +32

    If the purpose of an economy is to produce safety or health, Japan's Economy is highly efficient in both value per cost and absolute terms. Even if we want the benefits of high economic growth among the wealthy, its quite tragic that we don't offer a comfortable Japanese lifestyle to poor Americans who at least on paper have a higher income than the average Japanese.

    • @serebii666
      @serebii666 7 місяців тому +14

      Japan literally has some of the highest work related suicide and burnout rates on the planet. Not to mention karoshi - a Japanese term literally invented to describe death from overwork. This on top of a highly sexist and toxic work culture that has already borne fruit in a sharply declining population and generations worth of lacking innovation. Japan's economy is not highly efficient, in relative or even absolute terms. Even Korea has overtaken them in those metrics. Even certain Post-Socialist and Ex-Soviet countries have overtaken Japan in productivity and PPP/capita, let alone the other important metrics in HDI.

    • @M69392
      @M69392 7 місяців тому +2

      Keep in mind averages don't mean much in the USA because it's the land of extremes.

    • @Starstreak170
      @Starstreak170 7 місяців тому

      Mental health services in Japan are very poor or non existent compared to Western countries.

    • @coolbuddydude1
      @coolbuddydude1 7 місяців тому

      Health in japan LOL

    • @bebebaba3442
      @bebebaba3442 7 місяців тому +2

      ⁠@@serebii666I’m Russian and believe me, Russia has NOT overtaken Japan in wealth and life quality in general (especially infrastructure), it still has a very long way to go. It’s such a nonsense.
      Also, Japanese suicide rate is comparable to that of the US so your “karoshi” argument doesn’t make sense. There is only one difference - Japan takes these problems seriously and pays attention to it, that’s why whole world knows about “karoshi” even though its not that high in Japan compared to others

  • @vasilikonstan
    @vasilikonstan 7 місяців тому +18

    Did you guys have AI edit this video?!? It is so ridiculous. The narrator says the line, "a country rich in culture, but resistant to change" while footage of a rickshaw, and women wearing kimonos are shown? Give me a break. People in Japan don't travel around using rickshaws: they are a novelty geared towards tourists. And kimonos are worn for special occasions, or by performers, restaurant hosts, etc. Women in Japan don't just throw on a kimono and go to the grocery store. And kimonos and rickshaws and temples, etc. are not signs that the country is 'resistant to change.' They are signs that the people of Japan celebrate and choose to perpetuate their traditions, which is not a bad thing. And doing so does not mean the country cannot move forward. After all: these traditions and customs have been present continuously, even during Japan's technological heydey in the 1980s.

  • @killiansmith728
    @killiansmith728 7 місяців тому +4

    Even if they economy is inefficient, it still has respect, good work ethic and does not reply on outsourcing overseas workers do to cheap jobs for like America. I very much respect Japan for still being traditional.

  • @freebusy3512
    @freebusy3512 7 місяців тому +24

    Did WSJ see US put a straw into Japan's vein by forcing Japan, with the help from Japanese collaborator, to sign the Plaza Accord in 1985?

  • @axnyslie
    @axnyslie 18 днів тому +2

    What I would give to be stuck in 2000 forever. That was peak technology. Everything since has steered the world into a dystopia nightmare.

  • @digdug1577
    @digdug1577 7 місяців тому +5

    I just went to Japan and nothing I encountered made me think that they should be doing anything like the United States. I think sometimes the pinnacle of human culture can't be distilled into economic efficiency. The magic and reverence for old ways make Japan special in a way where I feel like the United States is a mess. By the way I actually saved my receipts in Japan because they were stamped individually and they were the most perfect receipts I've ever received and I never knew about hanko.

    • @kageyamareijikun
      @kageyamareijikun 7 місяців тому

      Yes it's all very quaint and cute and novel as a tourist. Not so fun once you try living here as a foreigner and get stonewalled everywhere you turn because "we are Japanese and you are a gaijin. This is Japan and this is traditional Japanese way". Also not fun if you are trying to hustle and earn a living instead of fawning and marvelling at all these "tradition" as if you are strolling inside a country-sized museum.

    • @missplainjane3905
      @missplainjane3905 7 місяців тому

      Crisp ?

  • @samuraijack1371
    @samuraijack1371 7 місяців тому +10

    There is value in quality and something that’s handmade vs machine made!
    Economists can say whatever but that doesn’t change ground reality. Look at the state of public transportation in the US vs Japan, look at the state of bridges and road in the US vs Japan. Look at the quality of stuff that’s made in US vs Japan. It’s day and night😊

  • @kazuhisanakatani1209
    @kazuhisanakatani1209 7 місяців тому +4

    I don't agree with the Hanko craftsman, but what he actually said was "When it comes to the things that matter, inefficiency matters".
    What he's trying to say was something like polite language tends to be superfluous, or there's always a ceremony for an event of great magnitude, which is inefficient from an economic point of view.
    I hate Hanko tradition, but the subtitle is unfair translation.

  • @Directlite664
    @Directlite664 7 місяців тому +71

    "Be like us" is not a compelling argument americans. Please provide actual data points. "Americans does this" means nothing.

  • @orsations
    @orsations 7 місяців тому +44

    There is a very strong implied assumption in this material that GDP growth is the chief metric by which a country's economic success should be measured. Why should Japan wish to "keep growing in the future?"

    • @thetroyzernator
      @thetroyzernator 7 місяців тому +12

      It's the best we have and a good place to start. The problem is when people don't look beyond it.

    • @daguchful
      @daguchful 7 місяців тому +14

      Japan is a great example of a country who has been able to move past the modern obsession with GDP.

    • @thetroyzernator
      @thetroyzernator 7 місяців тому +8

      @gabaghoul__
      That is absolutely not a thing.😅

    • @mic9check
      @mic9check 7 місяців тому

      What growth metric are you suggesting that one should look at instead?

    • @mc6372
      @mc6372 7 місяців тому +1

      how can you follow the WSJ and not have a basic understanding of economics?

  • @kyawzin
    @kyawzin 7 місяців тому +134

    The dude that he interviewed gave terrible examples to be honest, he could have given Japanese love for cash instead of using digital payments which is more surprising in an advanced economy.

    • @tonyquach9655
      @tonyquach9655 7 місяців тому +27

      I just came back from Japan and it seems the change from cash to digital payment is definitely improving. I was able to use my card for like 95% of places. This pertains to the big cities like tokyo/osaka. It was way different from when I visited back in 2017.

    • @glenvandy
      @glenvandy 7 місяців тому

      @@tonyquach9655 That's great to hear, heading that way later this year again and constantly using cash was quite a hassle, especially when so many cards now have no foreign transaction fees

    • @Arkiasis
      @Arkiasis 7 місяців тому

      ​@tonyquach9655 the Suica card is honestly great. You can use it as a debit card in most of Tokyo. These days though it's more so through the app as sort of an apple pay type affair.
      The US has been really bad with cards for a long time. When Europe switched to chip and pin the US didn't adopt that. And the US was very slow to adopt contactless debit/credit card payment. It's improved a lot in the last few years at least.

    • @ClitGPT
      @ClitGPT 7 місяців тому

      @@tonyquach9655 absolutely, I remember times when transiting through NRT or HND I couldn't buy ANYTHING from those vending machines without coins or their own cards. Looks like they are on the right path now, at least in this matter. More, same NRT and HND, the multitude of employee just unnecessary guiding people from jetways to security AGAIN, is far from efficient...

    • @santostv.
      @santostv. 7 місяців тому +14

      Germany also has that problem because they love cash and they apparently also still use faxes, my country in small businesses has that problem but because they like a bit of tax evasion don’t tell anyone ect

  • @vladaOSOD
    @vladaOSOD 7 місяців тому +346

    To the editors in charge of this video:
    Did you really not realize the footage was shot in log?

    • @addygreen8919
      @addygreen8919 7 місяців тому +14

      log? Do you mean analog?

    • @Heyspencerb
      @Heyspencerb 7 місяців тому

      No, log format, Google it

    • @perpetualcollapse
      @perpetualcollapse 7 місяців тому +161

      @@addygreen8919
      He’s saying the video wasn’t color graded. LOG video has dull looking color as it’s meant to be graded in editing.

    • @sulamy1955
      @sulamy1955 7 місяців тому +53

      Yes mate, it’s hilarious that such a big company made such a rookie mustake

    • @humble_integrity
      @humble_integrity 7 місяців тому +33

      @@addygreen8919 no i think that was on purpose to demonstrate a point

  • @Leeming1989
    @Leeming1989 7 місяців тому +8

    one thing to be said about needing 5 baristas in a Japanese Starbucks vs only 2 in the US is that 3 more people are employed.

    • @thomasgrabkowski8283
      @thomasgrabkowski8283 7 місяців тому

      Thing is Japan doesn’t have unemployment, in fact they have opposite problem-rapidly shrinking labor force due to their rapidly aging population and are running out of workers

    • @yuyutubee8435
      @yuyutubee8435 7 місяців тому

      It doesn't create employment, it creates _underemployment._ Most young adults in Japan are underemployed and poor. Is it better than unemployment? Yes, marginally.

    • @Patricia-cn7ox
      @Patricia-cn7ox 7 місяців тому

      @@thomasgrabkowski8283 that one is a self inflicted problem. You improve workforce with immigration but Japan prefers robots to immigrants.

  • @juandenz2008
    @juandenz2008 7 місяців тому +3

    Using the Hanko isn't going to cause a big drop in productivity. Floppy disks aren't widely used in Japan, similarly the starbucks example is silly. The number of workers per store doesn't seem much different to other countries when you take into account the business of the store. Productivity isn't the only measure of the quality of life in a country. Japanese products and services are better than many other countries in terms of quality, reliability and even price. There's also other factors like safety and cleanliness. Japan likely can make some changes to improve productivity but this video didn't really get to the core of the issue.

  • @Soleil-kf2qt
    @Soleil-kf2qt 7 місяців тому +133

    Fun fact: America now has a higher suicide rate than Japan, and Japan has only about 3,000 homeless people, compared to about 650,000 in America.

    • @sirebellum0
      @sirebellum0 7 місяців тому +28

      Its VERY hard to beat USA's ludicrously high homeless population, but if you look into it, a number of outlets and orgs are highly skeptical of Japan's homeless reporting. Some consider it to be very lackluster and dismissive with intentional agenda of keeping their numbers low to look good to the rest of the world. Additionally, there's a sizable phenomenon in Japan of young adults and teens technically not being "homeless" only because they are literally forced to go home by police when they are intentionally trying to harmful home/family situations such as domestic abuse or SA, which Japan does not take a strong stance against, prioritizing "the parent is always right" philosophy.
      Does that change your point all that much when you compare to America? No. But don't think Japan is just all sunshine and rainbows either

    • @mehg8407
      @mehg8407 7 місяців тому +27

      @@sirebellum0 Japan is not all sunshine and rainbows. That's not what he meant. But COMPARED to the US. My god, it's way way better. I hope they don't change. We should be learning from them.

    • @pigbenis274
      @pigbenis274 7 місяців тому +9

      @@sirebellum0 Japan is not all sunshine and rainbows but you couldn't pay me to leave it. I've lived in Japan for 10 years, every time I return to the US everything just seems like a mess of rude people and disorganization

    • @user-co5ri8dp_978
      @user-co5ri8dp_978 7 місяців тому +3

      Yeah. Japan's unemployment rate is 2.6% so it's perfect. Many unemployed Chinese and Koreans are looking for work in Japan.

    • @cobytang
      @cobytang 7 місяців тому +5

      Yeah, that's because Japan has a lot of homeless shelter-esque net cafes, karaoke boxes and SROs, paired with a high social stigma towards homelessness, which makes a lot of homeless people to hide themselves away in those places, thus taking them out of homeless statistics. If they live in the US, they'd 100% become actually homeless.

  • @user-cf7eo1hh6t
    @user-cf7eo1hh6t 3 місяці тому +3

    Capitalism: who are you texting?
    Japan: just my culture and heritage
    Capitalism: yeah, I don't want you talking to them anymore...

  • @user-gx9xf2zb6o
    @user-gx9xf2zb6o 7 місяців тому +5

    Hmmm, the U.S. is a society where only a few rich people are making money, right?
    There is no proper social insurance system.
    Inflation is so high and the gap between the rich and the poor is so great that it cannot be compared to Japan.

  • @kythrathesuntamer9715
    @kythrathesuntamer9715 7 місяців тому +27

    We still use faxes in the united states just not as frequently , the primary reason being that ultimately Email isn't that secure, and for communications that are meant fundamentally to be private, Fax machines are the better bet. Like you'd fax your Doctors office information, sometimes. And when they need to send your informaiton from one office to another in the medical industry they'd likely use Fax as they can't quite trust the security of Email. The West likes to make jokes about Fax machines being Obsolete but the reality is they're still used here, and will be whenever Email isn't sufficient.

    • @mujur9101
      @mujur9101 7 місяців тому

      why it is not safe? Are you using Chinese mail account and network?
      If not, US always claim their email account and network is the safest in the world.
      😅😅😅

    • @kythrathesuntamer9715
      @kythrathesuntamer9715 7 місяців тому +1

      @@mujur9101 For one thing in terms of tech at the level of personal computers tech evolves at a rate much faster than nature itself does and by exponents it improves so with that in mind "Tech time" is not like human time and in technical years the invention of email makes it just as ancient as fax because after just 2 years computers tend to double in speed these days and for many years it was every 18 months per moore's law which held up until relatively recently so once you go past 5 years everything older than that is Ancient in tech years and similiarly so like after that it's all legacy AF and usually expected to be what you'd find in a landfill and Email is "Ancient" the same way Fax is already, and thus hackers have had far more time to dicover vulrenabilites in the underlying system and I recall a certain kind of engineering where email that passes between domain names taking a rather lengthjy route that involves multiple hops to it's final destination such that it doesn't take a purely linear path from sender to recipient under the hood but boiunces a round a lot before it arrives at it's final destination at any point of course a person could man in the middle it should they want to. Which is why you're well advised to use PGP to send email if you really need privacy - but training someone how to use that is cumbersome compared to a fax.

  • @seeitfixit
    @seeitfixit 7 місяців тому +10

    It's all relative. French Bourdeaux Wine, Mexican Tequila, Japanese Sushi Knives, look to the traditional artisans that hold up these world renouned industries and they have no equals. When pride is measured in a tradition of perfection, instead of the fatness of wallet, outsiders see distress, but locals feel rich with satisfaction. Culture may not make much money but it is what makes you famous. In some ways, Japanese culture is like Nike, the brand is worth more than the sum of it's physical assets. If you were to compare countries as brands in the way it shapes the minds of people around the world, Japan is in the top 3. Imagine whipping out a hand carved white marble stamp when signing papers, or dabbing a MontBlanc fountain pen in a bottle of ink, we call that snobby, but the guy doing it feels pretty good.

  • @AliceZhou-yv6bq
    @AliceZhou-yv6bq 7 місяців тому +23

    I found Japan (at least Tokyo) way more efficient/high-tech-oriented than North America. I mean, the ramen places had vending machines so you didn't need more than 2 waiters!!

    • @user-co5ri8dp_978
      @user-co5ri8dp_978 7 місяців тому +1

      @@missplainjane3905 In Japan, construction work is already being carried out using unmanned heavy machinery operated from a control room hundreds of kilometers away.

    • @sumguy7716
      @sumguy7716 7 місяців тому

      Living in Japan paints a very different picture to just visiting.

    • @missplainjane3905
      @missplainjane3905 7 місяців тому

      @@sumguy7716
      Universal

  • @anthonyfrench3169
    @anthonyfrench3169 5 місяців тому +1

    I remember being a kid in the 80s and 90s and seeing Japan as this technological tour de force..
    Which it was, but upon moving here. It's a lot more complex than that. And I believe you captured what it's really like to live here for those who want to take the big step. This is very important information to have.

  • @NomadGaijin
    @NomadGaijin 7 місяців тому +5

    1:50 *showing chinese tourists dressed in kimonos as it they were Japanese* LOL

  • @raymond-i2v
    @raymond-i2v Місяць тому +2

    It's sad how difficult things have become in the present generation. I was wondering how to utilise some money I had. I used some of it for e-commerce business, but that sank. I'm thinking of how to use what's left to invest, but I don't really know which way to go.

    • @Jordan8568-l4u
      @Jordan8568-l4u Місяць тому

      It's a good idea to seek advice at the moment, unless you're an expert yourself. As someone who runs a service business and sells products on eBay, I can tell you that the economy is struggling and many people are struggling financially.

    • @RayaMarcus
      @RayaMarcus Місяць тому

      A lot of folks downplay the role of advlsors until being burnt by their own emotions. I remember couple summers back, after my lengthy divorce, I needed a good boost to help my business stay afloat, hence I researched for licensed advisors and came across someone of utmost qualifications. She's helped grow my reserve notwithstanding inflation, from $275k to $850k.

    • @Fred-w7t
      @Fred-w7t Місяць тому

      How can one find a verifiable financial planner? I would not mind looking up the professional that helped you. I will be retiring in two years and I might need some management on my much larger portfolio. Don't want to take any chances.

    • @RayaMarcus
      @RayaMarcus Місяць тому

      Her name is. 'Stacy Lynn Staples’. Just research the name. You’d find necessary details to work with a correspondence to set up an appointment.

  • @CharlieGeorge_
    @CharlieGeorge_ 7 місяців тому +88

    I think we can all agree that customer experience at a Starbucks is the true mark of societal progression.

    • @CarbinKid
      @CarbinKid 7 місяців тому

      Service progression

    • @the80386
      @the80386 7 місяців тому +4

      @CharlieGeorge - It's not but it can be a proxy for deeper systemic differences.

    • @davidanalyst671
      @davidanalyst671 7 місяців тому +4

      I want a coffee, but I don't want to get a coffee from someone who has to live with their mother because starbucks pays $$10 an hour in 2024

    • @chiluco2000
      @chiluco2000 7 місяців тому

      If their coffee was good it would a phenomenal success

    • @humanbeing3777
      @humanbeing3777 Місяць тому

      😂

  • @mingmingo449
    @mingmingo449 7 місяців тому +22

    A bit disappointing how this WSJ analysis could not get beyond the surface level.
    1. Japan slipped behind Germany mostly because of the exchange rate ---- which is a result of external factor(USD) rather than internal.
    2. Japan's inefficiency may be notable in a few examples, but almost everyone can also agree they'd rather make the money in the US(the "more productive" economy) and then spend it in Japan, usually because quality and service are better. Should we not factor quality, service etc. into the measurement too?
    3. Is there more data than the anecdotal Starbucks diss in the video? (which seems to be the only quantifiable evidence of Japanese low productivity here). It is widely accepted by economists that individual productivity had stagnated globally since the 1960s ---- I really doubt Japan is faring worse than global average.

    • @badminverse2136
      @badminverse2136 7 місяців тому +7

      I grow up with Japanese products. When I was young, everything electronics come from Japan. TV, mobile phones, Radio, Cars, portable CD players. Now, I don't see any Japanese products, TVs are Korean or Chinese, mobile phones are Chinese, Korean or iPhone, there are still Toyotas here but it is losing ground to Korean cars and Chinese cars. Japan is just slowly fading away and becomes irrelevant.

    • @M69392
      @M69392 7 місяців тому +2

      It's a 5 minutes long video. For more data, buy the newspaper? :-)

    • @Mikketamakulo
      @Mikketamakulo 7 місяців тому +7

      German population is only 84 vs 125 million of the Japanese. What is it with all the Japan white knights, when something even remotely negative is said about the country? Weakening of the yen might not even be a temporary issue but may persist for the foreseeable future. The situation will only get worse, not better due to the dire demographic situation in the country.

    • @bebebaba3442
      @bebebaba3442 7 місяців тому

      Absolutely agreed 👏

    • @FunnyPieces
      @FunnyPieces 7 місяців тому

      日本的主要原因还是创新不够,从而很难看到独角兽企业,所谓“完美”也是不愿改变、没有创新的体现。从另外一方面来说日本并不追求完美,从汽车行业经常性大规模数据造假可以看出这也点

  • @ed.amame_z
    @ed.amame_z 7 місяців тому +56

    By far one of the worst "informational" videos I have ever seen.

    • @yurgurtha4757
      @yurgurtha4757 7 місяців тому +5

      5 minutes is way just to short to explain something so complex. You watch it and still dont have the fully picture, just a glimpse.

    • @Endonae
      @Endonae 7 місяців тому +6

      The videos I've seen from WSJ lately have been consistently terrible. They don't do enough research, there logical issues with their analyses, they utilize or make deliberately controversial, or misleading clickbait titles.
      I don't read from them, but I hope that they're putting out better stuff than these videos. They are destroying their reputation and credibility.

  • @kty1245
    @kty1245 7 місяців тому +2

    Japanese Government
    "people aren't buying enough stuff. we must stimulate consumption."
    Also Japanese government
    "we're gonna raise the consumption tax."

  • @robertewalt7789
    @robertewalt7789 7 місяців тому +28

    Japan’s inefficient practices come from their post war excess population. But those people are retiring, smaller population following.

    • @Nerinav1985
      @Nerinav1985 7 місяців тому +14

      Japan is an extraordinary nation.
      As the first non European country to achieve industrialization by early 20th century, this nation prooved that it was possible to ascend technologicaly as a oriental civilization.
      Indirectly Japan was the inspiration behind every non western success story.
      Japan is a phoenix.
      Rising from the ashes of defeat and disasters.
      Land of rising love and beauty.
      🗾

  • @pollutingpenguin2146
    @pollutingpenguin2146 5 місяців тому +2

    Did they just skip colour grading this video entirely? This looks like raw footage, with nothing done to it.

  • @huntress1013
    @huntress1013 7 місяців тому +6

    My mom is Korean and also has a Hanko. They are also still used in Korea.

    • @bobnoname9159
      @bobnoname9159 7 місяців тому +2

      The use of hanko (dojang in Korean) is optional and very much the exception rather than the rule. In fact, these days, most documents are digital requiring electronic signatures so i'm not sure if dojang is still accepted in these cases.

  • @djtechzz
    @djtechzz 7 місяців тому +2

    I would like to disagree about the Starbucks example at 4:07
    Starbucks in Tokyo serve drinks faster, American starbucks are much slower and I have been to both(Lived in Tokyo my whole life).
    Also the Japanese menu is more diverse I believe.

    • @doendo3607
      @doendo3607 5 місяців тому +1

      Exactly😊
      There are a lot of young men and women who want to work at stylish Starbucks, and customers want to visit such lovely stores❤
      If we want cheap coffee, there are more suitable places like Doutor☕

    • @andrzejszpak688
      @andrzejszpak688 3 місяці тому +1

      Yes, its faster, but its not economically viable to pay 2x the wages to get a drink out slightly faster.
      That’s an example of over hiring and bad management.

    • @djtechzz
      @djtechzz 3 місяці тому

      @@andrzejszpak688 im sorry but Japanese starbucks are crowded. Like 5x the Americans. I partly believe thats because of the faster service.

  • @caleblaw3497
    @caleblaw3497 7 місяців тому +10

    at 3:00, the Hako stamps are touching the line. You'd need to redo all these documents :)

    • @Oceansta
      @Oceansta 7 місяців тому +1

      LOL i was thinking exactly that.

  • @Animal_Trip27
    @Animal_Trip27 7 місяців тому +2

    I don't understand why you call Japan's economy inefficient when it is still the top 4 largest economy. It only slid down one place from number three and now it is being criticized. If Japanese economy is inefficient, how do you call the economies of those countries way down there in the number 20's, 50's and below number 100 plus?

  • @MabGray-ge9tj
    @MabGray-ge9tj 7 місяців тому +3

    Americans fail to understand that countries are made to serve all its people and not just the business class. I wish we had more than 2 employers working at every Starbucks in the US.

  • @deep.space.12
    @deep.space.12 7 місяців тому +18

    Someone hasn't been to Germany 😂

  • @stavroshadjiyiannis6283
    @stavroshadjiyiannis6283 7 місяців тому +3

    This is all BS. It's about market access. Germany, South Korea & above all China have been eating Japan's lunch for some time now because the US favored them over Japan.

    • @Trgn
      @Trgn 6 місяців тому

      Foreign direct investment from the US plays a part but it's not that big of a factor. The US doesnt control the global market. It's all about momentum. Japan was already developed and there not much room left for rapid growth like SK or China. SK and China grew from 0 development into manufacturing and export oriented economies, had allow them to accumulated fast wealth to reinvest and keep snowballing their economy momentum with growing export and domestic demand for the past 3-4 decades. China today dominates global export volume in all sort of low commodities to mid tech products, using its advantage in economy of scale, low wages, large population thus large domestic market. While Japan manufaturing and export hardly grew much since. The aircons, TVs, home electronics and appliances by Toshiba, Sony, Sharp in the 90s that Japan used to make today are replaced with Chinese brands like Midea, Haier, Hisense, TCL,... at much lower prices point, or more premium Korean brands like Samsung, LGs... Japan cant really compete with manufacturing edge on a low resource island, where most raw materials have to be imported, relatively higher wages and aging population. While Korea had luck with its large high tech innovate, high manufacturing based coporations like Samsung, Hyundai hauling its entire economy. Korea also invested heavily in their own manufacturing facturies and supply chains in other developing countries to keep their cost low. China also do this to some extend in underdeveloped countries for both raw material access, and hoping for high investment return once these countries become high growth formula like China used to be. On the other hand Japan similar to most other Western countries had moved to finance and services based economy, instead of heavy manufacturing where they had lost the advantage. Not only does its output and export becomes stagnant. Japan also 1stly doesnt innovate like it used to, it missed out on the smartphone and EV trends that China and Korea had capitalized on. And 2ndly their coroprate leaders are very conservative with foreign investment elsewhere to find a way out, probly because 90s bubble and recession wiped out much of their accumulated wealth and cash, and set them on a very risk adverse, focus inward mindset. For Germany, it always long have had many innovative small to mid size companies specialized in niche export of parts, machineries and 'machines that go inside other machines' for the global market to keep its economy going.

  • @jun_suzuki42
    @jun_suzuki42 7 місяців тому +2

    I hate to say this, but.
    If it works, why fix it?
    The digital transformation cost money to the company.
    Plus with the weak yen currently and the cost of living rising.

  • @ppckrtt
    @ppckrtt 7 місяців тому +3

    Seen from a viewpoint of productivity at a corporate level, "fewer people are better". Alas, those who are denied to have a job then become a burden to the social system of the country, hence, to the taxpayers. With the exception of the US of course, as there social systems are almost non existent. Looking from a societal standpoint, Japan is doing far better, than the report tries to make viewers believe.

  • @CUMBICA1970
    @CUMBICA1970 7 місяців тому +23

    There's an expression in Japanese "Otona no jijoh" (Adult's reasons.) Hanko and fax are definitely some of those. I have like ten hankos. Meaning it's a huge market. About faxes I have a funny anecdote. In one factory that I worked some 15 years ago they still used big A1 size faxes to send and receive blueprints. It came all illegible but still it was mandatory (and of course they got the pdf version via email.) I asked my hancho (boss) what's all about and he said "well, otona no jijoh." It turned out the whole management kept this tradition to get kickbacks from the leasing company.

    • @Oceansta
      @Oceansta 7 місяців тому

      Agree. I don't think Government of Japan dictates how many employees will man a coffee machine. If there are 5 people, its probably coz Seattle decided there needs to be 5 people.

    • @missplainjane3905
      @missplainjane3905 7 місяців тому

      @@CheapSushi
      Really

    • @jimmylam9846
      @jimmylam9846 7 місяців тому +4

      Fax is using in German offices too !

    • @user-co5ri8dp_978
      @user-co5ri8dp_978 7 місяців тому

      ​@@jimmylam9846 It's very famous. town offices , etc.

  • @RubenRodriguez-fp8di
    @RubenRodriguez-fp8di 7 місяців тому +8

    Did you guys shoot Log and forget to add a LUT or color correct?

  • @southkoreausasmaster8805
    @southkoreausasmaster8805 7 місяців тому +22

    The problem with Japan's economy is that Japan is a colony of the United States, and the United States does not allow its younger brothers to be better than itself. Japan even needs to provide blood transfusions to the United States amid the U.S. economic crisis. Japan's semiconductor industry was dismantled by the United States itself and distributed to South Korea, Malaysia, and Taiwan.

    • @petergreen5337
      @petergreen5337 7 місяців тому +1

      ❤Precisely

    • @GeorgeMartinus
      @GeorgeMartinus 7 місяців тому +2

      Toshiba and Plaza Accord.

    • @KhizarKhan2001
      @KhizarKhan2001 7 місяців тому +2

      That was awhile ago Japan can do better now but they need reforms

    • @Tixolax
      @Tixolax 7 місяців тому

      They did the same to Germany pushing the conflict with Russia and cutting off the germans from cheap energy and resources.

  • @eminentgold
    @eminentgold 7 місяців тому +4

    Don't listen to others. Being the top largest economies has its own toll to its citizens. Just go at your own pace and maintain that balance between economy n culture. The price to pay for progress for progress sake is not worth it.

  • @xsuploader
    @xsuploader 6 місяців тому +2

    - easy to get a job
    - low house prices
    - declining population
    Honestly way better than the west. Id rather have those problems

  • @frankryan952
    @frankryan952 7 місяців тому +14

    This says nothing about the effect of Japan's crashing population. It would be a sad world if the only way to stay on top is to give up who you are.

  • @_unknown_channel_
    @_unknown_channel_ 2 місяці тому +1

    Japan is a “lagging country” that has been gradually lagging behind leading countries for more than 30 years.

  • @digits001
    @digits001 7 місяців тому +20

    Look, you can’t marvel at how a train arrives on time, every time and in the same breath complain about hanko having to not touch the line.
    The REASON Japan is admired and tourists flock there is because it does things DIFFERENT.

  • @zawarudo3973
    @zawarudo3973 7 місяців тому +2

    I understand every scientific data points to slow GDP growth in Japan. Yet, having lived in the US for more than a decade, the quality of living in the US was far more inferior than Japan. I really don't get why. I moved to Japan in 2024, and it has been the best decision I've made. Sometimes, the economic output and the quality of output contradict.

  • @noco-pf3vj
    @noco-pf3vj 7 місяців тому +3

    In Indonesia, Hanko is called Cap Basah (big blue round seal, not red like in Japan). It is still used for bureaucracy, especially for shady people who want to manipulate legal documents.

  • @richardsimms251
    @richardsimms251 Місяць тому +1

    Very interesting

  • @Hamari_Lori
    @Hamari_Lori 7 місяців тому +3

    Efficiency is quantity oriented in nature... And does not have a consideration for qualitative aspects.... Growth is not always good... A cancer is also a growth albeit abnormal

  • @fullstarlaming7937
    @fullstarlaming7937 6 місяців тому +2

    I loved Japan's penchant for perfection and precision, i dont mind if its slow and steady!

  • @archerdarker
    @archerdarker 7 місяців тому +3

    This work from Wall Street Journal really misses the point. Focusing on hanko is ridiculous. Has WSJ given up on pens and pencils as well? Are there no more economists at WSJ?

  • @hayek218
    @hayek218 7 місяців тому +4

    Japanese do not want to pursue efficiency and lose culture like the US. It is none of your business.

  • @Mm-fv3oq
    @Mm-fv3oq 7 місяців тому +5

    In the Japanese workplace, if you work efficiently, new jobs will be served to you. Actually, people don't want to work so much, so they work so lazy. That’s why we work inefficiently every single day.

  • @JavierRomero-n9g
    @JavierRomero-n9g 7 місяців тому +1

    Being in Japan was an eye opening experience compared to the US and still I am wanting to go back bc of the tradition and the way it was in Japan. We don’t have that in a diverse place like the US. Things still need to be improved in both countries (US and Japan) but the problems are way different ones bigger than the other.

  • @RyanBreaker
    @RyanBreaker 7 місяців тому +4

    Really want to know whether not color grading this was intentional for the story or not and just forgotten.

  • @AlfredJPLin
    @AlfredJPLin 6 місяців тому +1

    I agree with all points & criticism about Japan. But what is ignored in this video is that Japan is changing & adopting new strategies now.

  • @scottmarquardt3575
    @scottmarquardt3575 7 місяців тому +25

    When I was a little kid in Seattle it was important to pay extra for American cars. When I was a metal fabricator in San Jose I realized the best machines are from Japan. I think Japanese products are better than American ones but I won't tell anybody

  • @JBeestonian
    @JBeestonian 7 місяців тому +2

    God forbid that a country doesn't sacrifice it's soul on the altar of efficiency and profit.

  • @Caorl
    @Caorl 7 місяців тому +25

    I'm Japanese and from my point of view, this culture prioritizes 'be perfect' for everything (actually not everything but trying to be)
    You can see in Japan.
    No trash on the street.
    No delaying train.
    If you get in Japanese company, you will see a lot more.
    Even Japanese struggles to be used to it at first...
    Those all cost. But they expect that.
    However gradually
    they understand the economic situation and priority for QOL.
    Although it's still extremely perfectionism culture.
    But recently, technology catching up and it may cover human effort.

    • @Caorl
      @Caorl 7 місяців тому +2

      確かに大企業などでは年功序列や流動性の低い人材市場なども背景に、非生産的な環境が出来上がっていますが、小売やサービスの世界では、やはり細やかな質の高さを求められるし、そこにかける労力は並外れていると思います。

    • @alastairhimmer1916
      @alastairhimmer1916 7 місяців тому +7

      Too many employees in offices sitting at desks for long hours doing nothing apart from sharpen pencils or change the coffee filter. That's why Japan's economy is sinking like a stone.

    • @GongChaLover
      @GongChaLover 7 місяців тому +3

      There’s a difference between striving for perfection and being inefficient. I think the Japanese mindset of striving for perfection is something to be preserved and improved upon; it’s a good foundation. Being stuck in the past and the glory days of Japan has got to go if Japan wishes to stay relevant.

    • @vlhc4642
      @vlhc4642 7 місяців тому +4

      You realize Japan isn't the only country that has no trash on street or have trains running on time.
      Japan is inefficient because they tell themselves having no trash on the street makes them special and use that to justify not improving.

    • @bebebaba3442
      @bebebaba3442 7 місяців тому +5

      @@alastairhimmer1916Japan is fine, it’s still one of the wealthiest in Asia

  • @kwykwyk8447
    @kwykwyk8447 5 місяців тому +1

    You can't really show the wage growth chart without showing the GDP growth chart... Do we really need inflation to go through the roof like Western countries? The living wage in the US for example is ridiculously high
    Also, sure floppy disk needs to be done away with, but ask yourself, is tech in 2020 really that much better than 2000s? Do you want the AI, surveillance and data collection that comes with tech in 2020s? You could argue consumer tech peaked in 2000 and improvement have been marginal
    And lastly, 5 barista in a Japanese Starbucks will make infinitely better drinks, better customer service and order accuracy than the 2 baristas at a US Starbucks.
    Maybe those 2 baristas are overworked, on a minimum wage that is below a living wage, forced to work a second job to make ends meet?