Tuesday, 24 November 2009

Defray

Defray ... defla- ... or as it is know in English deflation is the media buzz word at the moment.  The Japanese govt. announced last week that the Japanese economy is back in a deflationary state.  I could have told them that without relying on a report.
The other day NHK (the national broadcasters) recited a litany of price reductions.

Average natto (fermented beans) price  - down 10%
Average shampoo price - down 20%
Bottled water price - down 30%.

I don't remember the others.

Last night we were out and hot cans of oshiruko - a sweet red bean soup - were 50 yen!  That's about 55c Aus for a can of drink.  The cans are small, the same size for coffee, but usually sell for 120Y - at least the coffee does. The other day in Niigata Lily bought 2 bokchoy for 30 yen for the two of them and a big bag of veges for about 1200 Y.

It's utterly mad with much pricing that is totally unsustainable. 
I am no economist, but there is some logic to the long term situation of deflation.

- Salaries have been cut (Hokkaido govt. 2 years ago cut all employees salaries by 10%), bonuses - which are built into a full time workers expected salary - are being withheld or cut, and new staff are more likely to be employed on a part time basis.
- immigration policy is also, I suspect, pushing wages in many sectors down - unlike Australia where most immigrants, at least traditionally, plan to live in Australia in the future, Japanese immigration seems to have a high percentage of people here for short term work.  Guest worker schemes seem to work in some places, notably Singapore and  Dubai, here I think it's probably reasonable to conclude it contributes to overall wages being pushed down.  (I will investigate this further and perhaps in the future write in more detail - immigration statistics are difficult to draw conclusive opinions from.)  There are also large numbers of people coming on short term visas in skilled industry, who can afford to work for less because they are saving for a future in a much cheaper country.  Unlike most developed countries, Japan does not really have a policy of encouraging permanent immigration which may help stimulate the economy. (this should be qualified in the pursuit of accuracy, however it's too tangental for this post.)
 - Most goods are now manufactured in China or SEAsia rather than domestically.
- Many food stuffs are now being imported from other parts of Asia
- Clothing manufacture has moved to mass production and large chain store sales reducing the cost
- Chain operators now dominate cheaper restaurants - their ingredients are sourced from overseas and they employ few full time staff.
- the population is falling - fewer people, less demand.
- the population is aging rapidly - people in their 80s and 90s are low consumers of most thing aside from healthcare and medicine.
- interest rates are less than one percent - no scope for interest reduction to stimulate the economy.
- banks are leery of lending money to anyone that could be a risk - partly due to banks making such poor lending decisions in the past.
- Japanese propensity to save rather than spend. (credit card use is quite minimal here - the other day I was at H&M and of the six people ahead of me buying clothes, all 6 paid in cash (and me made 7).
- Japanese propensity to save with an emphasis on low risk - a non yielding bank account rather than stocks etc  (currency trading has been popular recently, though it seems a lot of people have been burned)
- cut price chains moving into bloated industries eg funeral industry which is traditionally obscenely expensive (partly because most temples operate as businesses rather than as non profit organisations).

Last night's news showed a meeting of retired JAL staff who are having their pension entitlements, which were presumably set during the bubble economy and when JAL was massively profitable, cut.  The retirement pension amount will still be about 70% higher than the now average salary.
This story was followed by the surge in loan sharking on people falling behind in rent payments.

I will need to ponder a bit longer to come up with any constructive suggestions, but some constructive suggestions are sorely needed.   The future of a Japan that appreciates cheapness at the expense of skill or beauty or workmanship is rather grim.






Vending machine with  50Y oshiruko, 80Y corn soup, 100 coffee.
Blue background behind the price shows it is cold, a red background shows that it is a hot drink.
Usually these drinks sell for 120Y.

Fukushima

There are some very scenic places in Japan.
Over the weekend we went to Fukushima - about 200kms north of Tokyo.It was beautiful but soooo cold that the vending machines selling hot chips almost became attractive.  (almost).  A couple of times in the mountains of Fukushima and Tochigi we were riding through falling snow.  Very cold but also potentially treacherous on a motor bike....
We stayed at a minshuku (Japanese style B&B) in Kaneyama machi which had very tasty local food for breakfast and dinner. I was a bit of a whimp though and my horse meat sashimi went into my pork hotpot for some cooking...  Hiro did the same after a very bad experience with food poisoning at a minshuku we stayed at in Nagano several years ago.
I'd like to go back to Fukushima: it tends to be off the Tokyo radar - too far to be convenient and too close to be exotic, and  the concentration of nuclear power reactors probably doesn't help its image either.  Next time we go it will be when it's warmer!






















The pictures above and below are taken near the
Hideyo Noguchi Memorial Museum.














A giant Kannon (godess of mercy statue near Aizu).
It is relatively recently built and forms part of Aizu mura - a sightseeing attraction.

The end of autumn leaves with  newly fallen snow




Monday, 23 November 2009

thanks to the workers day

Today is kinro kansha day, a public holiday to recognise and appreciate the workers.   The timing just about coincides with American thanksgiving, and although the day was instituted during American occupation (in 1948).  The origins are apparently in much older a festival, Niiname-sai, which marked the end of the rice harvest.

We have spent the day endeavouring to be appreciative.  It is much more uplifting  than dwelling on the irony of a day set aside to appreciate workers while on the remaining 355 days workers are discouraged from taking holidays, sick days, where full time work with attached benefits is a pipe dream for many young people, and where the Japanese lexicon has a word, karoshi, which means death from overwork.

Long live genuine appreciation!

Thursday, 19 November 2009

supermarkets and sensors

I was thinking last night about the sticking episode, and my neurotic reaction to it.  Many things, most things perhaps I can adjust to, but not the sticking and not movement sensor recordings in the supermarket.  The local supermarket used to have sensors that shouted at you 'HON JITSU, HON JITSU KAGIRI.....'   (TODAY, TODAY OOONLY ..... ).  They were so closely positioned that you could sometimes hear three at the same time.  At quiet times in the supermarket they had a way of jerking you out of the meditative glazed over feeling you get wandering the aisles wondering where the yeast could possibly be.... 
They also made me neurotic.  I used to dart from machine to machine turning them around, unplugging them, turning them upside down - anything short of breaking them that would silence them.
Hiro used to roll his eyes.... 'why do you shop here then!!!!!'
Fair point but it's the nearest supermarket....

Happily I can report that the era has come to an end.  No more having the senses accosted by recorded messages.  Peace in the supermarket.  Hiro thinks they have a sensor to detect mad gaijin (foreigners) that come into the supermarket and they quickly pack away the offending machines when one approaches.

Me however, I feel relief and vindication :)