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Good News About Abenomics Abenomics' Failure Will Let Korea Beat Japan in Per-capita GDP by 2020

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Good News About Abenomics
Good News about Abenomics: Abenomics' Failure Will Let Korea Beat Japan in Per-capita GDP by 2020 | BusinessKorea
Shinzo%20Abe%20in%20London.jpg

Shinzo Abe, prime minister of Japan, discusses his economic policies in a speech in London, June 2013.


21 OCTOBER 2014
The Korea Center for International Finance (KCIF) provisionally condemned Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s economic policy as a failure, with concerns over the Japanese economy on the rise. “Signs of side effects of Abenomics are appearing these days, although we have to wait and see when it comes to economic stimulation,” the KCIF said on October 20, adding, “We are about to publish a report about the current state of and warnings against Abenomics.”\The danger signals mentioned by the center include a decrease in real purchasing power caused by inflation, slow private investment in spite of expansionary fiscal policy and quantitative easing, national income drain for the weak yen, and the collapse of small firms and the service industry.

“The Bank of Japan purchased government bonds in huge quantities to cause the prices to rise and the real purchasing power to drop,” it pointed out. The year-on-year inflation rate was negative 0.2 percent in December 2012 during the early stage of the policy package, but topped 1 percent in June 2013. It has remained at over 3 percent since the consumption tax hike on April 1.

The Japanese government’s quantitative easing is not working out, either. Japan’s real GDP growth rate was 2.3 percent last year, and most of that was led by the government’s 15 percent investment expansion. The GDP gap dropped from negative 8 percent or so to negative 0.3 percent between 2009 and last year. “Less GDP gap implies less growth potentials,” the KCIF explained, continuing, “The Japanese government’s expansionary fiscal spending is not leading to private investment and, besides, what little money is flowing into so-called zombie companies to deteriorate the efficiency of the economy.”

Another crisis factor is the weak yen. “The depreciation of the currency is causing the national income to leak abroad while driving service providers and small firms to bankruptcy,” it mentioned. According to statistics, a total of 214 Japanese companies went under between January and September this year due to the weak yen, while the number was just 89 for the same period of 2013.

Local economists, in the meantime, are predicting that the Korean economy would be affected by the failure of Abenomics, but could take the opportunity to overtake Japan in the long term. “Though there are a number of variables, Korea will be able to exceed US$40,000 in per-capita GDP by 2020 to surpass Japan by a margin of at least US$318 if it succeeds in economic innovation at an annual growth rate of 4.5 percent for years to come and Japan’s growth is limited to 1 percent a year,” research analyst Jun Min-kyu at Hankook Investment & Securities commented.

@Nihonjin1051
 
That's going to be a bitter pill to swallow. We already see Korean brands competing with or surpassing their Japanese counterparts world wide. It'll be a huge blow to the national psyche of Japan to see their former colony (whom they look down upon even to this day) surpass them economically.
 
When will Korea release a game console? It's too late for this current generation with the Xbox one and Ps4 already out but maybe next generation?
 
Japan will innovate it's way out of this. While Russia will continue to bank on resources for growth. Here's hoping Japan/US can develop clean plentiful energy for the future.
 
The winner of the China-Japan row is Korea (economically) and the US (provisionally, strategically).

I am not sure who is the loser here, though.

It is a far-fetched hope, for sure, but, I would like to see Japan to remove the US military presence in the country, which is the largest thorn in China-Japan relations. Then, as equal partners, the potential is enormous.
 
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The winner of the China-Japan row is Korea (economically) and the US (provisionally, strategically).

I am not sure who is the loser here, though.

It is a far-fetched hope, for sure, but, I would like to see Japan to kick out the predatory US military presence in the country, which is the largest thorn in China-Japan relations. Then, as equal partners, the potential is enormous.

You are absoluely right buddy :enjoy:
A strong East Asian coalition means endless suppy of sleeping pills for the White Hse :dance3::dirol:
 
When will Korea release a game console? It's too late for this current generation with the Xbox one and Ps4 already out but maybe next generation?

I don't support console. It's the game that matters. Korea's Massively Multiplayer Online game has a more significant impact than Japanese online games since they don't rely on consoles especially on the Free to Play model.

Anyway, console is actually slowing and limiting progress of technology (Monopolistic instead of freely available to all platforms). Both hardware and software.

Example:
 
No one buy Japanese brands anymore.

Even in US, recently Toyota "did" it again!
 
If that anti-Toyota media drivel and Congressional hearing circus had not taken place, Toyota would have already smashed the US car-makers for good.

Japan should never let the US car-makers get a share in domestic market.


I agree. Besides, I am in the position that American cars are of inferior quality to Japanese cars.

I am not fond of GM /Chevy.

And i am in a position that FORD stands for Found On Road Dead; given its history of engine problems, leaks, heating issues.
 

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