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Massive 8.8-magnitude quake strikes Japan

This is a great blow to India, and a great opportunity for China to spend some of our worthless FDI on aid to Japan while India loses a major investor.

If India can have a better visa policy for Chinese nationals, maybe we can invest in India more. But as of now, Indian immigration controls treat Chinese people worse than Zimbabwe, North Korea and Congo. A hint: it's bad to treat millionaire investors like trash.

This situation also presents a great opportunity for Chinese infrastructure firms to take their business to Japan.

Currently Japanese investment in India stands at around 0.5B per year, and annual trade is at 5B per year. China now has a chance to step in to fill in this potential void :cheers:
 
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This situation also presents a great opportunity for Chinese infrastructure firms to take their business to Japan.

Currently Japanese investment in India stands at around 0.5B per year, and annual trade is at 5B per year. China now has a chance to step in to fill in this potential void :cheers:

Can India work on its business visa policy first?! several projects were cancelled in India by Huawei due to visa issues for the managers. A major impediment to improvement of trade between India and China is the visa.

With Japan's newfound crisis, I agree this is a golden opportunity to not only build infrastructure in Japan but to fill the void of Japanese investment into India. A crucial part of investment is mutual respect at the professional level.
 
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Can India work on its business visa policy first?! several projects were cancelled in India by Huawei due to visa issues for the managers. A major impediment to improvement of trade between India and China is the visa.

With Japan's newfound crisis, I agree this is a golden opportunity to not only build infrastructure in Japan but to fill the void of Japanese investment into India. A crucial part of investment is mutual respect at the professional level.

You know how Indian bureaucracy works :). Huawei should collaborate with an Indian investor (in the form of a JV) and that person can put pressure on the govt. to ease the visa norms.
 
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• Japanese media say 2,000 bodies found in two coastal locations in Miyagi prefecture
• Tsunami warning appears to have been false alarm
 
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Not to sound insensitive or anything, but has anyone assessed what will be the economic impact of this disaster? I've seen a couple of blogs, but nothing comprehensive.

And being an Indian, I'm obviously interested in the impact on India. Off the top of my mind, the proposed investment in Delhi metro by Japanese govt will take a hit I think. Can anyone elaborate along these lines? Thanx.

The Guardian's Japan correspondent Justin McCurry has more information on the financial and economic impact of the disaster:

Japanese shares were heading for huge losses on Monday after the fallout from last week's deadly tsunami sent the Nikkei stock average down by more than 6% in Tokyo.

Monday was the first full day of trading since the earthquake and tsunami brought devastation to vast parts of Japan's northeast coast.

The scale of the damage is expected to exact a heavy economic toll and force the government to borrow heavily to fund the rebuilding effort. Concern is also mounting about the disaster's impact on energy supplies in the wake of serious problems with reactors at two quake-damaged atomic power plants.

The yen slid against the dollar after the Bank of Japan said it would pump a total of 15 trillion yen into the financial system to ensure liquidity for private lenders affected by the quake. The bank will inject a further 3 trillion yen on Wednesday.

Japan's automakers, electronics firms and oil refiners were among the hardest hit in Monday's trading, and saw their share prices drop by double-digit percentages.

Toyota, the world's biggest carmaker, said it would suspend all production in Japan until at least Wednesday. Nissan and Honda have announced similar measures.

The broader TOPIX index fell 7.6% and was on course for its biggest single-day loss since October 2008, when stocks nosedived after the Lehman shock.

Japan's central bank, which is holding a policy meeting on Monday, said it would closely monitor currency markets. Some analysts expected the bank to announce further emergency measures later in the day.
 
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6.19am (3.19pm JST): China is willing to offer more help to Japan, Premier Wen Jiabao said today in his annual press conference. A rescue team arrived yesterday and Beijing has also sent relief supplies. Reuters reports:

China has set aside acrimony over territorial disputes and wartime memories to extend the hand of friendship to Japan, sending a team of rescuers to help search for survivors from the disaster, which likely killed more than 10,000 people.

"I want to use today's opportunity to extend our deep condolences for the loss of lives in this disaster and to express our sincere sympathy to the Japanese people," Wen said.

"China is also a country that is prone to earthquake disasters and we fully empathise with how the Japanese people feel now," he added.

"When the massive Wenchuan earthquake hit the Japanese government sent a rescue team to China and also offered supplies," said Wen, referring to the 2008 Sichuan earthquake that killed more than 80,000 people.

"We will continue to provide further necessary aid to Japan in accordance with their needs."
 
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Associated Press has a disturbing report on the conditions for survivors despite a massive relief operation.

"People are surviving on little food and water. Things are simply not coming," said Hajime Sato, a government official in Iwate prefecture, one of the three hardest hit.

"We have repeatedly asked the government to help us, but the government is overwhelmed by the scale of damage and enormous demand for food and water," he told The Associated Press.

"We are only getting around just 10 percent of what we have requested. But we are patient because everyone in the quake-hit areas is suffering."

He said local authorities were also running out of body bags and coffins.

"We have requested funeral homes across the nation to send us many body bags and coffins. But we simply don't have enough. We just did not expect such a thing to happen. It's just overwhelming."

---------- Post added at 11:48 AM ---------- Previous post was at 11:48 AM ----------

A second account focuses on the desperate situation at a hospital in Takajo, Miyagi:



The nurses have been cutting open soiled intravenous packs and scrubbing down muddy packs of pills with alcohol to cleanse them...

"I'm sorry, we have no medicine," the staff repeatedly told a constant flow of people from the town, many of them elderly.
 
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Analysis: Japan quake risks severe near-term economic damage
By Natsuko Waki
LONDON | Mon Mar 14, 2011 5:21am EDT

(Reuters) - A triple blow of earthquake, tsunami and one of Japan's worst nuclear accidents is set to damage the world's third largest economy, possibly more deeply and for longer than initially expected.

Power outages and possible tax rises are likely to hurt companies and households and could outweigh the mild economic aftershock from the 1995 Kobe earthquake, given that oil prices and the yen are stronger and Japan's debt pile is much bigger.

Rolling blackouts will start Monday, affecting businesses and households as the country grapples with its worst crisis since World War Two. More than 1 million people are without water or power and towns have been wiped off the map.

Already saddled with debt that is double the size of its $5 trillion economy and threatened by credit downgrades, the government is discussing a temporary tax rise to fund relief work.

Japan's economic growth is in a better profile than it was when the Kobe quake struck. But many say a noticeable hit to GDP, which was only just recovering from contraction at the end of 2010, is likely to be felt over the next several months.

"When we talk about natural disasters, we tend to see an initial sharp drop in production... then you tend to have a V-shaped rebound. But initially everyone underestimates the damage," said Michala Marcussen, head of global economics at Societe Generale.

"Power supply is a critical factor. If power production output is damaged in a sustainable fashion, that could have a durable impact on the economy."

Tokyo Electric Power Co said on Sunday it may have to conduct rolling blackouts in winter, in addition to summer.

"The earthquake will bring lots of things to a halt. We are going to see quite a dent on GDP, blackouts will lead to a sharp contraction of production," said Janwillem Acket, group chief economist at Julius Baer.

He estimated the damage would be felt for two quarters, but it was not likely to knock the economy back into recession.

"We know public finances are already weak, much weaker than they are during Kobe. Pressure for emergency tax hikes is there. But I don't think the economy will go back to recession."

GROWTH IMPACT

Following the 1995 Kobe earthquake, the economy shrank by 2 percent, followed by a V-shaped recovery. Back then, oil prices were hovering around $17-21 a barrel while the yen -- key to exporters -- was at around 100 per dollar when the quake hit.

Currently with oil prices at near 2-1/2 year high above $100 and the Japanese currency at a stronger 82 per dollar, the impact from these two factors alone will be more adverse.

Japan's gross domestic product shrank by an annualized 1.3 percent in Q4. A Reuters poll published before the quake showed it was likely to expand 0.5 percent in Q1, or roughly two percent on an annualized basis.

"The Japanese economy is now likely to take longer than we expected to exit its current lull. We had projected an April-June exit but now forecast July-September or possibly October-December," Nomura said in a note to clients.

Nomura expects the largest negative impact on quarterly real GDP growth will emerge in April-June 2011.

"Based on the experience of the Kobe earthquake, we think a V-shaped recovery supported by a rapid upturn in demand driven by government-funded rebuilding work in the affected areas is also unlikely," it said.

Bank of America Merrill Lynch expects the quake-hit areas account for up to 7.8 percent of Japan's GDP, compared with 12.4 percent from the regions affected by the Kobe earthquake.

The bank expects the hit to GDP to be at least 0.2-0.3 percentage point, although a relatively large amount of spare capacity may offset the production loss.

The yen rose sharply following the Kobe earthquake as Japanese companies repatriated capital, a pattern which may gather momentum in the coming week.

However, possible measures from the Bank of Japan may bring two-way flows into the market.

The BOJ is likely to provide 2-3 trillion yen in funds through its market operations Monday morning, two to three times the normal amount, to soothe markets and keep short-term borrowing costs from spiking.

The central bank may ease monetary policy further. With interest rates virtually at zero, the most likely option is for the BOJ to top up the 5 trillion yen pool of funds it put in place last year to buy assets ranging from government bonds to private debt -- a factor that could weigh on the yen.

Nomura said the BOJ could increase the scale of its asset purchases to 8-10 trillion yen.

MORE DEBT

Another obstacle is Japan's fragile debt position, already double the size of its $5 trillion gross domestic product.

BofA Merrill Lynch expects the cost for the rebuilding could be at least 1.0 percent of GDP, while Nomura expects the size of any extra budget for rebuilding to exceed 3 trillion yen.

Brendan Brown, economist at Mitsubishi UFJ Securities, said it seems plausible that the debt costs could add between 2 percent to 10 percent of GDP to its massive public debt load.

This could hit its credit rating again. Japan was downgraded by Standard & Poor's in January given the lack of a plan to fix public finances and Moody's has warned it may do the same.

Others also suggested the government may tap into its $1 trillion-plus foreign exchange reserves -- the world's second largest -- to finance relief work.

"Normally you don't think about using foreign exchange reserves for this but it's possible," Marcussen said.
 
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Obama vows to stand by longtime ally Japan

President Barack Obama says he has offered Japan any assistance the United States can provide as it recovers from “multiple disasters.”

Mr. Obama said he continues to be heartbroken by the images of devastation that have struck the U.S. ally. He pledged on Monday to stand by the people of Japan in the wake of the earthquake and tsunami that delivered a double blow to the island nation and has left thousands dead or missing.

The natural disaster has also triggered a potential nuclear crisis in the country, as explosions have stuck at two power plants.

The U.S. Navy says it has moved several U.S. ships away from a troubled Japanese nuclear plant after detecting low—level radiation on 17 helicopter crew members positioned there for relief efforts.

The Hindu : News / International : Obama vows to stand by longtime ally Japan
 
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Liz Ford and Claire Provost of the Guardian's global development website have been reporting on the international contribution to the rescue effort in Japan. LINK

Along with the 500 rescue specialists and 30 rescue dogs (above) who have arrived in Japan from around the world, they write that financial aid is coming from a diverse range of sources:

Countries still deeply affected by natural disasters or political unrest – including Pakistan, New Zealand, Afghanistan and Bolivia – are among those offering aid and support.

China, which is engaged in a border dispute with Japan and views its neighbour with deep suspicion, is among the 17 Asian states that have pledged help, offering $4.5m (£2.8m) in aid.

The first shipment of emergency materials, including 2,000 blankets, 900 tents and 200 emergency lights, was due to be flown from Shanghai to Tokyo today. New Zealand, meanwhile, has sent a 65-strong search and rescue team.
 
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Japan's stock market "went into freefall" today – plunging more than 10% amid growing radiation fears in the aftermath of Friday's tsunami.

The Nikkei 225 share average closed 10.6% down, having been as much as 14.4% lower at one stage. Over two days the benchmark index has lost 16% of its value, its biggest two-day decline since the 1987 crash.

The index ended at 8,605, a loss of 1,015 points by its close at 6am London time. The falls came despite the government pumping in a further $61bn of emergency funds into the market.

Economics minister Kaoru Yosano said: "Japan's production and the economic power have not fallen. I think the market confusion will calm down in a short time."

Shares in the Tokyo Electric Power Company, which runs the Fukushima plant, are down 42% from its Friday close. On Tuesday shares in Nippon Steel fell 11%, while Fast Retailing, the owner of the Uniqlo brand, was down 17.5%.
 
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