segunda-feira, 26 de abril de 2010
Financial Times "Japan's splendid isolation may be at risk" Why I think may be not.
David Pilling's rendition of present-day Japan looks like a country resigned to early retirement.
Indeed only twenty years ago, a brief interlude in a nation's history, Japan Inc. seemed ever ready and powerful enough to take on the US. It already had to a considerable degree but its businesses' unabashedly increasingly confident affirmative ways pointed to a much higher profile. It did not come true as the country began to stutter and stagger to finally get internally bogged down in an unending relative downward spiral.
Mostly, Japan remained where it managed to rise and arrive at, in a position of relative stagnation while the rest of the world moved on.
Why this is so I still find hard to comprehend despite every explanation offered. Somehow these never appear plausible and far-reaching enough.
Now is a very changed world from back in 1990.The relative positions of countries have shifted no doubt both in economic and geopolitical terms.
If Japan has for years been under the spell of China's rapid economic ascent, 2010 could translate that into sharp reality should confirmation of 2nd/3rd largest economy swap occur between the two.
But is Japan past its peak then?
Developed and mature as its economy and society may be is there no more room for Japanese expansion?
A reversal of its plight over the so-called two lost decades?
I believe the country is not as spent a force as is being suggested.
If the cultural and tourism revival underway is anything to go by, Japan with its many cutting-edge technological wonders might still stage an economic comeback of sorts.
Will it?
Indeed only twenty years ago, a brief interlude in a nation's history, Japan Inc. seemed ever ready and powerful enough to take on the US. It already had to a considerable degree but its businesses' unabashedly increasingly confident affirmative ways pointed to a much higher profile. It did not come true as the country began to stutter and stagger to finally get internally bogged down in an unending relative downward spiral.
Mostly, Japan remained where it managed to rise and arrive at, in a position of relative stagnation while the rest of the world moved on.
Why this is so I still find hard to comprehend despite every explanation offered. Somehow these never appear plausible and far-reaching enough.
Now is a very changed world from back in 1990.The relative positions of countries have shifted no doubt both in economic and geopolitical terms.
If Japan has for years been under the spell of China's rapid economic ascent, 2010 could translate that into sharp reality should confirmation of 2nd/3rd largest economy swap occur between the two.
But is Japan past its peak then?
Developed and mature as its economy and society may be is there no more room for Japanese expansion?
A reversal of its plight over the so-called two lost decades?
I believe the country is not as spent a force as is being suggested.
If the cultural and tourism revival underway is anything to go by, Japan with its many cutting-edge technological wonders might still stage an economic comeback of sorts.
Will it?
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