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Jack wrote:Kamone, Taro et al...Some of you guys must feel so superior in Japan that may be why you live there. Eat some humble pie, it's good for your fucking health.
Jack wrote:Kamone, Taro et al,
Yes, I forgot. Only Americans or English speaking people are smart and know what everyone else needs. Japanese people are infinitely less arrogant than Americans, much harder working than most of the American continent and western Europe. The only clueless people that I see around here are the Americans.
Some of you guys must feel so superior in Japan that may be why you live there. Eat some humble pie, it's good for your fucking health.
Thanks for the lesson in Economy 101. Now, who exactly were you calling arrogant?Jack wrote:So, going back to Japan bashing, you have to know what is behind the problem before you start accusing of people being arrogant or lazy.
No. Japan does NOT need inflation... things are already too expensive as they are now. Maybe you're looking at a different definition of inflation or have a more specific inflationary target than you mentioned in your post, but in general inflation is only as good as the wages. If costs inflate but wages do not, you've got Carter's stagflation.Jack wrote:The Bank of Japan and the minister of finance have repeatedly tried to re-introduce inflation, which is what Japan desparately needs, to no aveil.
Pushing the exchange rate of the yen down helps export companies like the automotive industry, who sell wares in foreign countries (which convert nicely to yen when the yen is cheap, giving the companies a larger price margin than their competition) but those companies have (for the most part) already been competitive in the global market. Nissan is a good example of a Japanese export company that was bleeding cash, but instead of asking for a handout from the taxpayer it did what it had to do: cut costs in order to survive. What Captain Japan, Kamome, Topo, and GJ are saying is that the domestic companies are coddled by the government, so they don't feel the pressure to improve performance.Jack wrote:If anyone has a magical way of re-introducing inflation, the problems will disappear. The Bank of Japan keeps selling yen to push the currency lower but the yen keeps going up.
No, but they could use taxpayer money to bail out the banks (like the U.S. does) instead of funneling funds into dubious public works projects.Can't lower interest rates anymore because they are already so low.
Cut the corporate tax to 10-20% instead of the outrageous 40% that it is now, and offset that by increasing the individual income tax (please hold your boos until the end). Seize assets tied to organized crime, institute RICO-like laws with teeth, and weed the police force of the weak (because you can't enforce those RICO laws with the current men in blue).Can't cut taxes to create liquidity as the government is already hugely in a deficit.
More like "People do not buy things because they can't afford them on their meager salaries".People do not buy things now thinking that it will be cheaper later.
Jack wrote:The Japanese government very well knows what the problem is they just don't know how to fix it. That is why I said you have to look at the situation with a Japanese mindset.
Jack wrote:The Bank of Japan and the minister of finance have repeatedly tried to re-introduce inflation, which is what Japan desparately needs, to no aveil. If anyone has a magical way of re-introducing inflation, the problems will disappear. The Bank of Japan keeps selling yen to push the currency lower but the yen keeps going up. Can't lower interest rates anymore because they are already so low. Can't cut taxes to create liquidity as the government is already hugely in a deficit.
Jack wrote:American arrogance because if you call them "lazy" you imply that you have the answer to the problem but that Japanese people don't or are unwilling to remedy the situation. It is arrogant of you guys to pretend to have the answer to the problem because you don't. No one does, which is why we have a problem. Try understanding why things are the way they are.
Captain Japan wrote:You mention the US facing delation, and you know what? You're probably right. But I also think that someone might actually *do* something about it.
Captain
Jack wrote:Fuck off man. There is nothing you can do short of shredding your currency to nothing to create inflation. The tough talking gunslinging yankee boys who think they are a superior race will soon find out as well.
CS wrote:Japan does NOT need inflation... things are already too expensive as they are now. Maybe you're looking at a different definition of inflation or have a more specific inflationary target than you mentioned in your post, but in general inflation is only as good as the wages. If costs inflate but wages do not, you've got Carter's stagflation.
Pushing the exchange rate of the yen down helps export companies like the automotive industry, who sell wares in foreign countries (which convert nicely to yen when the yen is cheap, giving the companies a larger price margin than their competition) but those companies have (for the most part) already been competitive in the global market. Nissan is a good example of a Japanese export company that was bleeding cash, but instead of asking for a handout from the taxpayer it did what it had to do: cut costs in order to survive. What Captain Japan, Kamome, Topo, and GJ are saying is that the domestic companies are coddled by the government, so they don't feel the pressure to improve performance.
They could use taxpayer money to bail out the banks (like the U.S. does) instead of funneling funds into dubious public works projects.
Cut the corporate tax to 10-20% instead of the outrageous 40% that it is now, and offset that by increasing the individual income tax (please hold your boos until the end). Seize assets tied to organized crime, institute RICO-like laws with teeth, and weed the police force of the weak (because you can't enforce those RICO laws with the current men in blue).
Jack wrote:Corporations do not vote.
Jack wrote:Just keep going as is and hope for the best is what I can say.
Jack wrote:This is exactly what I call fucking US arrogance. Here you have it in print. Japan is not doing anything but the US will do something about it. Fuck off man. There is nothing you can do short of shredding your currency to nothing to create inflation. The tough talking gunslinging yankee boys who think they are a superior race will soon find out as well.
Jack wrote:Sorry to burst your bubble but I am an economist by profession. CS made several points which are well-known but in reality they are contradictory. For instance if you have inflation, then salaries go up in proportion. The fact is, banks have tons of assets (outstanding
GuyJean wrote:Jack wrote:Just keep going as is and hope for the best is what I can say.
This is advice from a professional economist? It's broke, don't fix it?
GJ
Okay, I understand the real estate purchase (especially if you don't already own a home), but a commodity like gold? Isn't that rather risky... gold on its own isn't very useful... you can't eat it, and no store will take it in exchange for goods or services. You're speculating that the value of the gold *now* will hold after the world's currencies take a dump... but that supposes that someone else will buy that gold. Are there any major economic players who still tie their currencies to a gold standard?Jack wrote:My advice is buy gold or real estate properties and dump all currencies
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