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Young Japanese scholars head to China for stable, independent jobs

Japanese have been a closed society which has served them well in the past. Now they are opening up, which is a welcomed by others. We are getting a glimpse of their culture and work ethic which I am a big fan.
Now it is Chinese turn. It is good to see China is opening up to Japanese people, who they consider as adversaries.
Actually during most part of history, China was very opened up, Japanese, Korean and Vietnamese cultures all originated from China.
 
Of course, the world tells this truth with their money


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Well, that's fine.
My point is that japanese products are pretty well-liked worldwide, even in China.
 
Well, that's fine.
My point is that japanese products are pretty well-liked worldwide, even in China.
Then there's no problem, and Chinese products are the most liked on this planet, and no countries can live without them.
 
> Using trade surplus to judge a country's corporate competitiveness lmao.

1) Japanese companies don't manufacture just in Japan. A Panasonic product produced in Vietnam exported to Japan counts towards Vietnam's trade exports and Japan's trade imports, but the profit is accrued to Japan's current account. Japan's primary income from overseas is usually outstrips their trade deficit. That's why over the years Japan regularly incurs trade deficit but still manages to have large current account surpluses.

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TOKYO (Kyodo) -- Japan's current account surplus shrank 63.1% in the first half of 2022 from a year earlier to 3.51 trillion yen ($25.9 billion), influenced by a major goods trade deficit stemming largely from a higher oil price and the weak yen, the Finance Ministry said Monday.

The fall in the current account surplus was the second steepest for a half-year period following the second half of 2008 when a global financial crisis sparked by the collapse of U.S. securities firm Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc., according to the ministry's preliminary report.

The current account balance is one of the widest gauges of international trade.

Among key components, the country had a goods trade deficit of 5.67 trillion yen, the second-largest deficit since comparable data became available in 1996, and a service trade deficit that expanded to 2.49 trillion yen from 2.09 trillion yen in the first half of 2021, according to the ministry.

Meanwhile, primary income, which reflects returns on overseas investments, rose to a surplus of 12.87 trillion yen, up 22.4% year on year, the data showed.


In June alone, the country logged a current account deficit of 132.4 billion yen, dipping into the red for the first time in five months, largely due to the goods trade balance going into the red, the ministry said.

2) Trade surplus or current account surplus is a poor indicator of a country's corporate competitiveness. The US has the largest trade deficit but their companies are still among the most profitable and valuable in the world, and they are non-state owned.


Macau has a trade surplus. Does that mean they have better companies than the US?
Suppose the US experience a severe recession and wages falls, resulting in a contraction in consumer spending and imports. Does that mean that American companies produce better products now?

Chronic trade surpluses/deficits just means fundamentally there's a mismatch between domestic consumption and external consumption.
 
> Using trade surplus to judge a country's corporate competitiveness lmao.
It's just one indicator, Japan used to be a huge trade surpuls country without counting overseas earnings and Japanese companies are becoming less and less competitive in the global market, it's not all about trade surplus or deficit, but it does serve as one of many indicators.
 
> Using trade surplus to judge a country's corporate competitiveness lmao.

1) Japanese companies don't manufacture just in Japan. A Panasonic product produced in Vietnam exported to Japan counts towards Vietnam's trade exports and Japan's trade imports, but the profit is accrued to Japan's current account. Japan's primary income from overseas is usually outstrips their trade deficit. That's why over the years Japan regularly incurs trade deficit but still manages to have large current account surpluses.

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2) Trade surplus or current account surplus is a poor indicator of a country's corporate competitiveness. The US has the largest trade deficit but their companies are still among the most profitable and valuable in the world, and they are non-state owned.


Macau has a trade surplus. Does that mean they have better companies than the US?
Suppose the US experience a severe recession and wages falls, resulting in a contraction in consumer spending and imports. Does that mean that American companies produce better products now?

Chronic trade surpluses/deficits just means fundamentally there's a mismatch between domestic consumption and external consumption.

True in some sense but not for Japan. US has been running massive trade deficit for many years, while high tech industries are still very competitive. In the case of Japan, most big brands are already fallen except for car industry.

Now China is going to be world biggest car experter. I am not sure how long Japan can maintain her high standards of living.

In US very few people are aware that most US industries have fallen other than few.
 
True in some sense but not for Japan. US has been running massive trade deficit for many years, while high tech industries are still very competitive. In the case of Japan, most big brands are already fallen except for car industry.

Now China is going to be world biggest car experter. I am not sure how long Japan can maintain her high standards of living.

In US very few people are aware that most US industries have fallen other than few.
Too much doom and gloom, people said japanese were gonna stop making phones, yet now they still have more phone brands (Sony, Sharp, even Kyocera) than S. Korea with the departure of LG.

As long as they keep making quality stuff, there will be buyers, especially in the hi-end enthusiast markets.
 
Too much doom and gloom, people said japanese were gonna stop making phones, yet now they still have more phone brands (Sony, Sharp, even Kyocera) than S. Korea with the departure of LG.
Japanese economy looks very bleak is a known fact, even Japanese themselves admit it. Germany is posing to surpass Japan in GDP this year and even India claims it will overtake Japan very soon. South Korea and Taiwan just surpassed Japan in per capita GDP this year.
 
Too much doom and gloom, people said japanese were gonna stop making phones, yet now they still have more phone brands (Sony, Sharp, even Kyocera) than S. Korea with the departure of LG.

As long as they keep making quality stuff, there will be buyers, especially in the hi-end enthusiast markets.

Looking deep into statistic, the marketshare is almost non existence for Japanese handset markers.

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Japanese economy looks very bleak is a known fact, even Japanese themselves admit it. Germany is posing to surpass Japan in GDP this year and even India claims it will overtake Japan very soon.
GDP doesn't decide product's quality.
I'm not sure about Germany but India will definitely surpass Japan, and in the future India will surpass the US too, so it would be just China vs India.
 
GDP doesn't decide product's quality.
I'm not sure about Germany but India will definitely surpass Japan, and in the future India will surpass the US too, so it would be just China vs India.

You never work with Indians. Their engineers and managers will stand and smile, do nothing when something goes rotten. To Indians, doing handson is biggest insult to them. This is Brahmin culture.

Indians only care about becoming managers and keeping their rice bowl. Everything is non issue.
 
Looking deep into statistic, the marketshare is almost non existence for Japanese handset markers.

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Japanese handsets are selling in their home country along with some smaller markets like Taiwan and Hong Kong.
In Vietnam, I still see Sony phones being popular in the gray market.

You never work with Indians. Their engineers and managers will stand and smile when something goes rotten. To Indians, doing handson is biggest insult to them. This is Brahmin culture.
It's economy of scale, my friend.
In capitalism, bigger is better, quality be damned.
 
LoL, You sound more and more like Indians.
Why, because I don't think India should be underestimated?
US underestimated Japan.
Japan underestimated China.
Now China underestimates India.

The same song and dance.
 

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