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Takechanpoo wrote:but i dont understand why IMF too push it, eh?
Additional Pension Plan
There is an extra voluntary plan to pay a small additional benefit to your Old-age Basic Pension. If you opt for this plan and pay the contribution of ¥400 / month, you can receive additional benefit, which is subject to early / delayed payment option. However, this contribution is not subject to the Lump-sum Withdrawal Payments.
Benefit Amount
Annual amount = ¥200 × Number of month to which you paid the Additional Contribution
Wage Slave wrote:Takechanpoo wrote:but i dont understand why IMF too push it, eh?
Let me help ......
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_future_gross_government_debt
wagyl wrote:Veering off-topic but are you aware that you can voluntarily top up your national pension over and above the standard contributions?
http://www.nenkin.go.jp/n/www/english/detail.jsp?id=38Additional Pension Plan
There is an extra voluntary plan to pay a small additional benefit to your Old-age Basic Pension. If you opt for this plan and pay the contribution of ¥400 / month, you can receive additional benefit, which is subject to early / delayed payment option. However, this contribution is not subject to the Lump-sum Withdrawal Payments.
Benefit Amount
Annual amount = ¥200 × Number of month to which you paid the Additional Contribution
chokonen888 wrote:Wage Slave wrote:Takechanpoo wrote:but i dont understand why IMF too push it, eh?
Let me help ......
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_future_gross_government_debt
Maybe it'll be like the Casino proposal, they'll separate the currency...Yen for FG and Yen for Japanese?
In-house calculations by the International Monetary Fund showed that Japan’s inflation rate, excluding the effects of foreign exchange fluctuations, has hovered around zero in 2014, sources said. The IMF figures indicate that Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s package of economic and fiscal measures, designed to move Japan out of a deflationary state, has been less effective than government officials had hoped for. Although the results of the IMF calculations have not been made public, the figures were shown to finance ministers and central bankers at an October meeting of the IMF and the World Bank, according to sources in international finance. The nation’s overall inflation, excluding the effects from the April hike in the consumption tax rate from 5 percent to 8 percent, has been rising in the neighborhood of 1.5 percent on a year-on-year basis. The overall inflation is known as "headline inflation" in the financial market. But the IMF’s calculations showed that inflation remained basically flat when the effects from the weaker yen over the past year or so, such as higher prices for imported products and raw materials, were excluded. According to the calculations, consumer prices in Japan have risen by only up to 0.3 percent and even declined by 0.2 percent in 2014 on a year-on-year basis. In presenting the results of the calculations at the October meeting, IMF officials explained that not only has Japan’s inflation rate been around zero excluding the effects from the weaker yen, but also that Japan’s exports had not increased as much as expected with the slide in value of the Japanese currency.
Japan's economy contracted more than initially thought in the July-September quarter, revised official data revealed Monday, showing the world's third largest economy sank deeper into recession.
The economy shrank 0.5 percent quarter-on-quarter, worse than the 0.4 percent estimated in initial data released three weeks ago, the Cabinet Office said.
The reading was much worse than the median forecast of a 0.1 percent quarterly shrinkage in a survey by the Nikkei economic daily.
“Recession,” “stagnation,” “slump,” were the ominous labels I constantly read describing Japan before I moved here in late 2009. After I’d settled in, a better word seemed “kaiteki,” which means “comfort,” and conveys a wide range of virtues like convenience, reliability, safety, even charm. I was struck by the disparity between the world’s perception of Japan and the remarkable feeling of prosperity here—compared not just with the bubble-era Japan I saw when last living here 20 years earlier, but with the America I experienced in the interim, during its own boom times.
Tokyo in recession showed none of the distress you would expect in the U.S. or Europe: no boarded-up storefronts, garbage piles, beggars, trashed subway stations or any hint of serious street crime. If anything, the city had spiffed up considerably during the “lost decades” of my absence. Near my financial-center workplace, the dumpy cinder-block office buildings with smoky coffee shops were replaced by gleaming towers anchored by gourmet dining and high-end clothing stores, bustling with customers. In my home neighborhood in a more traditional part of the city, old businesses did frequently shut down—but the space would close only during a frenzied weekend refurbishment, reopening Monday with rows of bouquets outside used to celebrate new openings.
The numbers don’t lie. Japan’s economy, by many measures, has been in historic decline, causing distress for a growing underclass of workers who lack permanent full-time jobs and for regions far from Tokyo where the population is shrinking. But the country has, by and large, managed a relatively comfortable, peaceful decline. That helps explain why it took so long for an aggressive response, in the form of Abenomics—and why the public has so quickly developed second thoughts.
Having covered Japan’s topsy-turvy politics and economics for The Wall Street Journal over the past five years, this is what I see as the defining tension in the country: deflationism vs. reflationism, two starkly different visions of Japan’s future.
Deflationists emphasize stability, see demography as destiny and believe Japan’s aging, shrinking population inevitably dictates a stagnant economy. Their response: minimize risk, disruption and division to make that transition as comfortable as possible—like a nation planning for retirement. Reflationists consider that outlook unnecessarily defeatist. To them, risks and disruptions are a price worth paying for a more expansive, dynamic future...
http://www.wsj.com/articles/japans-econ ... 1417640405
wagyl wrote:The comment I would make about that journalist's experiences is that Tokyo is a special case: it is not really representative of the situation in the rest of the country.
Samurai_Jerk wrote:wagyl wrote:The comment I would make about that journalist's experiences is that Tokyo is a special case: it is not really representative of the situation in the rest of the country.
How so?
wagyl wrote:Samurai_Jerk wrote:wagyl wrote:The comment I would make about that journalist's experiences is that Tokyo is a special case: it is not really representative of the situation in the rest of the country.
How so?
From where I view it, both as a past resident of Tokyo and a current resident of the declining countryside, there is a greater prosperity, a greater resilience to the recession still present in Tokyo. For an outsider, looking at national figures, who then travels to Tokyo and says "for all the talk of lost decades, the retail tenancies are never vacant and buildings are shiny and new," I think they are only getting one, non-representative view of the economic situation here. You could almost say that Tokyo is a vampire, looking healthy and longlived because it is sucking the lifeblood, the working age people and their families, out of the countryside. There are plenty of boarded up shopfronts and rust if you get out of Tokyo.
Aso explains Japan's problems: Young people, incompetent executives
Finance Minister Taro Aso effectively blamed young people for exacerbating Japan’s social security woes and said companies struggling under Abenomics are either unlucky or run by incompetent managers.
The gaffe-prone former prime minister made his observations on the campaign trail for the Dec. 14 Lower House election.
In a Dec. 7 speech in Sapporo for a candidate in the election, Aso said the trend of people having fewer children was the key reason the government was having difficulties financing snowballing social security expenditures. But he used a verb that generally refers to women.
“There are many people who are creating an image that elderly people should take the blame, but the more serious problem is that people are not giving birth,” he said.
dimwit wrote: ... None of the problems of course, are caused by having fuckwit geriatric finance ministers.
The ruling Liberal Democratic Party’s campaign promises include comprehensive measures to lift the nation’s birthrate.
Russell wrote:The ruling Liberal Democratic Party’s campaign promises include comprehensive measures to lift the nation’s birthrate.
That's not the first time I hear that from them, but apparently the previous measures didn't work very well.
What are they going to do now?
Forced fertilization of the nation's flowers?!?
Coligny wrote:Ehmmm... Nagoya is also sprouting boutiques and high rise tower in every direction... Hell... Even Toyohashi got more than a new mansion a year around the city center disfiguring the landscape.
Go to the countryside, yes, stuff is closing left and right... But don't mistake the effect of depopulation with recession... Little village dying is nothing new...
Salty wrote:Russell wrote:The ruling Liberal Democratic Party’s campaign promises include comprehensive measures to lift the nation’s birthrate.
That's not the first time I hear that from them, but apparently the previous measures didn't work very well.
What are they going to do now?
Forced fertilization of the nation's flowers?!?
That will be the next constitutional amendment – to specify the obligations of Japanese Nationals, rather than their rights. 3 rugrats per woman, minimum. Failure to produce them to bring strong tax penalty.
IparryU wrote:Salty wrote:Russell wrote:The ruling Liberal Democratic Party’s campaign promises include comprehensive measures to lift the nation’s birthrate.
That's not the first time I hear that from them, but apparently the previous measures didn't work very well.
What are they going to do now?
Forced fertilization of the nation's flowers?!?
That will be the next constitutional amendment – to specify the obligations of Japanese Nationals, rather than their rights. 3 rugrats per woman, minimum. Failure to produce them to bring strong tax penalty.
well, i can help with the fertilization.
J.A.F.O wrote:IparryU wrote:Salty wrote:Russell wrote:The ruling Liberal Democratic Party’s campaign promises include comprehensive measures to lift the nation’s birthrate.
That's not the first time I hear that from them, but apparently the previous measures didn't work very well.
What are they going to do now?
Forced fertilization of the nation's flowers?!?
That will be the next constitutional amendment – to specify the obligations of Japanese Nationals, rather than their rights. 3 rugrats per woman, minimum. Failure to produce them to bring strong tax penalty.
well, i can help with the fertilization.
Well I'm keeping up my end of the stick ... so to speak
chokonen888 wrote:J.A.F.O wrote:IparryU wrote:Salty wrote:Russell wrote:The ruling Liberal Democratic Party’s campaign promises include comprehensive measures to lift the nation’s birthrate.
That's not the first time I hear that from them, but apparently the previous measures didn't work very well.
What are they going to do now?
Forced fertilization of the nation's flowers?!?
That will be the next constitutional amendment – to specify the obligations of Japanese Nationals, rather than their rights. 3 rugrats per woman, minimum. Failure to produce them to bring strong tax penalty.
well, i can help with the fertilization.
Well I'm keeping up my end of the stick ... so to speak
Don't you mean "giving" your end of the stick?
IparryU wrote:chokonen888 wrote:Don't you mean "giving" your end of the stick?
Well, depending on how much contribution he has, keeping it up the whole time may be more difficult.
Dem double Y alpha male chromosomes!
J.A.F.O wrote:my wife is at the point she just tells me to get find a girl friend so she can get some damn sleep.
chokonen888 wrote:J.A.F.O wrote:my wife is at the point she just tells me to get find a girl friend so she can get some damn sleep.
Get that in writing!
chokonen888 wrote:I think IPU has been trollin' the senior centers lately...
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