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Mock Cockpit wrote:Nothing that a modern East Asian Co-Prosperity Sphere couldn't fix.
Amanojakuu wrote:How many of them people bailing get to their native country to realise that, well, the recession has hit there too?
Samurai_Jerk wrote:Some of them were lifers who were happy teaching English and had a pretty good thing going for them for until the middle of last year
It works both ways. The Mrs. works at a well known Japanese relocation company here in Yurop, and you wouldn't believe the number of Japanese families returning to ol'Nippon who've been here for ages.Samurai_Jerk wrote:I was at a neworking event last week and had several conversations with different people (all gaijin) who said they think Japan is done. One group of guys worked for a relocation company and said the number of expats and business they've moved out of Japan this year is unbelievable and like nothing they've ever seen. Another guy said that when he flew out of Narita in the Spring there were stacks of gaijin cards that must have been turned in by people who weren't coming back. I've heard the same opinion from several other people since the end of last year and personally know some people who were supposed to be lifers that either have left or are seriously considering it because things have gotten so bad for them. On top of that a lot of foreign financial institutions are scaling back in Japan and beefing up in HK or Singapore.
Of course no matter what the situation or the importance of a country, people can always find a way to make money but is this finally it?
I'm going with "Yes" by the way.
GomiGirl wrote:It all depends on your perspective. Sure the traders, finance people are leaving and if that is the only circle that you move in, then perhaps it would seem like everybody is going.
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Typhoon wrote:Good point.
Having fewer foreign traders and financial types in Japan is not necessarily a negative when one considers the "outstanding" job that they've done elsewhere. ]It is Japan we should be worrying about, not America[/URL]
Although I wonder what difference, if any, is there in that, unlike the US, Japan owes it's debt to itself.
Samurai_Jerk wrote:I was at a neworking event last week and had several conversations with different people (all gaijin) who said they think Japan is done. One group of guys worked for a relocation company and said the number of expats and business they've moved out of Japan this year is unbelievable and like nothing they've ever seen. Another guy said that when he flew out of Narita in the Spring there were stacks of gaijin cards that must have been turned in by people who weren't coming back. I've heard the same opinion from several other people since the end of last year and personally know some people who were supposed to be lifers that either have left or are seriously considering it because things have gotten so bad for them. On top of that a lot of foreign financial institutions are scaling back in Japan and beefing up in HK or Singapore.
Of course no matter what the situation or the importance of a country, people can always find a way to make money but is this finally it?
I'm going with "Yes" by the way.
taisaku wrote:Why do you think that Japan is finished when all the gaijin leave? Does it depend on gaijin whether Japan is finished or not? That suggestion sounds a bit arrogant to me.
Yokohammer wrote:Unless, of course, the entire thread has been about whether Japan is "finished" from a gaijin-in-Japan perspective.
rooboy wrote: English teachers aren't done - not gaijin like me anyway who don't
own an English school but make a fair living outta teaching. The point here is there are still more opportunities in Japan for Eng. teaching if you're here, got some real experience under your belt etc.
BO-SENSEI wrote:in the mean time, many prefectures are slashing ALT teaching positions even further
james wrote:good and about time! no offence to you or anyone here on jet - for the most part, the people i've met are nice and i've made some friends - but i'm tired of seeing my taxes wasted on this bullshit. scrapping the whole fucking progam would be a good start.
i don't know how it is in other prefectures, or for that matter, even other cities, but i'm tired of paying for ALTs to sit around at the town office / board of education doing facebook or going to an elementary school to play frickin dodge-ball.
Samurai_Jerk wrote:Although I agree with you that the JET Program isn't the best use of resources, the money used is peanuts compared to all the other shit our tax yen are wasted on.
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