Japan's Debt Problem Visualized

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  • čas přidán 3. 04. 2013
  • A short, visual explanation of Japan's debt crisis.
    Credits:
    Inspired by the work of Kyle Bass of Hayman Capital (www.haymancapitalmanagement.com/).
    Music: "Sounds Like A" by DoKashiteru (ccmixter.org/files/DoKashiteru...)
    is licensed under a Creative Commons license (creativecommons.org/licenses/n....
    Icons: Largely courtesy of New Mediators (newmediators.com/references/ne...) under a Creative Commons license (creativecommons.org/licenses/b....

Komentáře • 4,6K

  • @lesleykramer7207
    @lesleykramer7207 Před 5 lety +497

    This video is a fine example of how something simple can be made *extremely* confusing. The background music doesn't help either.

    • @gabbar51ngh
      @gabbar51ngh Před 3 lety +42

      I actually understood Japan's debt problem and got confused after watching this video

    • @bprosperie
      @bprosperie Před 3 lety +7

      He used like 4 different terms for raising interest. Makes you have to slow down the video a little more just to grasp it

    • @KR-nw7iq
      @KR-nw7iq Před 3 lety +6

      So unfair to the creator of this video.

    • @icantthinkofaname8139
      @icantthinkofaname8139 Před 3 lety +3

      What the fuck did i just watch

    • @sealflip
      @sealflip Před 3 lety +1

      @@icantthinkofaname8139 japan being extremely broke, i did not realize what i watched until i turned subtitles on XD

  • @tulaconalas
    @tulaconalas Před 9 lety +175

    it amuses me that this video explains it for a 5 year old and im still having a hard time to understand

    • @SouperDuck1
      @SouperDuck1 Před 9 lety +31

      Nacho Miranda I had trouble paying attention to the video with that very annoying background music otherwise decent video

    • @tulaconalas
      @tulaconalas Před 9 lety +4

      PaperBag yeah it explains in a good simple way..but still I gotta watch it another 5 times.

    • @KarimAymanRiesco
      @KarimAymanRiesco Před 9 lety +19

      Nacho Miranda This is precisely the result of our system controlled by the banks and their slaves (our governments), they made sure it would be very difficult for us to understand these things, otherwise we would have burned all banks by now...

    • @tulaconalas
      @tulaconalas Před 8 lety +1

      ***** not really, i got 129 on the last check, not the internet crappy ones. But im losing power of attention and retaining information. Bad sleeping i guess.

    • @Funcakes20
      @Funcakes20 Před 8 lety +5

      +Nacho Miranda It started off very simple but got complicated FAST. I got lost around the 2:20 mark....the terminology/concepts just kinda got dumped on you after that point.

  • @Richard-ox6zk
    @Richard-ox6zk Před 7 lety +1487

    holy shit... that's really horrible music behind the clip

    • @Campo_
      @Campo_ Před 7 lety +64

      It's like it's supposed to complement the problem of debt.

    • @Razor4884
      @Razor4884 Před 7 lety +102

      I liked it.

    • @WoodChoppa911
      @WoodChoppa911 Před 6 lety +4

      That music makes me very dizzy and confused

    • @duxnihilo
      @duxnihilo Před 6 lety

      That defies at least 13 definitions of music.

    • @myspacetimesaucegoog5632
      @myspacetimesaucegoog5632 Před 6 lety +2

      Definitely bad music. Why even have music on such a video?

  • @a9e6
    @a9e6 Před 2 lety +21

    9 years later and Japan's debt problem is still not "game over".

    • @SethMethCS
      @SethMethCS Před 3 měsíci +1

      They created new bubbles to pay for losses on previous bubbles.
      Like opening new credit cards to pay the minimum monthly payment on already maxed out credit cards.

  • @ragnar0209
    @ragnar0209 Před 7 lety +475

    Oh my god, the music in the backgound just destroys the whole video, it's impossible to focus

    • @dvnsix
      @dvnsix Před 7 lety +17

      absolutely true, worst music you could find for this kind of video

    • @DestinyYT0
      @DestinyYT0 Před 7 lety +9

      thought i were the only one. So fucking true.

    • @anantvats5392
      @anantvats5392 Před 7 lety +8

      completely agree!! Awful sounds!

    • @SiliconBong
      @SiliconBong Před 7 lety

      !

    • @SiliconBong
      @SiliconBong Před 7 lety +1

      *****
      :o

  • @AlabamaSoldier
    @AlabamaSoldier Před 7 lety +518

    Ok, I now understand nothing about Japan's budget problems.

    • @SonicSP
      @SonicSP Před 7 lety +43

      AlabamaSoldier basically, the video is saying that in the future investors will be less and less willing to borrow money to them because they can't afford to pay them back as their spending much more than they're earning. So it's a spiral.

    • @RyuRaza
      @RyuRaza Před 5 lety +6

      That's because everyone from Alabama is a dummy 😂

    • @leikfroakies
      @leikfroakies Před 5 lety +13

      The problem is, Japan has had a 'debt crisis' since the 80s. Financial collapse has been projected ever since, yet nothing has ever happened

    • @msya2831
      @msya2831 Před 5 lety

      soo you don't although already watched the video OK GOODDD BoY

    • @artaniskim2120
      @artaniskim2120 Před 5 lety +9

      @@leikfroakies LOL... how do you compare the current situation to 80s... what was the interest rate set by the Bank of Japan in 80s?. It was from 4 to 8 %. Also, after 1985, Japan experienced enormous capital inflow from western countries after the 1985 dollar crash (Plaza Accord).
      Now, the table's turned, the current interest rate set by the BOJ is -0.1%. Would you buy their government bonds at that rate?. You don't get anything back ~.
      So the Japanese government decided to buy their own bonds by printing money because no foreigners are insane enough to buy them. This is why Japan has not recovered from the 1997 Asian Crisis, the government just kept buying up every asset and killing free market, facing liquidity issue.
      The end is near for Japan, if the rates start to pick up globally, Japan will follow too. Then we will see the Japanese government declare a default on their debt.

  • @MrReon1806
    @MrReon1806 Před 4 lety +72

    That background music increased my Cortisol hormone level.

  • @SUVCRV
    @SUVCRV Před 7 lety +46

    Japan has the largest current account surplus,
    is the largest creditor country,
    and has the largest foreign exchange reserves.

    • @myczxr
      @myczxr Před 3 lety

      one side of the coin

    • @sealflip
      @sealflip Před 3 lety

      @@myczxr yoo smarty

  • @daviskampschror4874
    @daviskampschror4874 Před 9 lety +532

    what do you mean game over? do the octopuses come out of the water, mutate with the dragons and burn down japan with giant katanas?

  • @Lius525
    @Lius525 Před 8 lety +339

    I want to know how Japan managed to get so much debt, it had been one of the strongest economies for 50 years, their defense spending is miniscule and Japan is still a huge exporter of electronics. Why didn't they just raise taxes to keep deficit under control?

    • @LuaanTi
      @LuaanTi Před 8 lety +184

      +Kenpachi Zaraki They did, and they still are raising the taxes. For example, the consumption tax was just 3% prior to 1997 (and even that was only introduced in 1979), and is now 8%, with a scheduled increase to 10% in 2017. Personal income taxes vary from 5% to 40%, with additional fixed amounts (absurdly progressive taxation). The main problem is that increasing taxes hardly ever manages to raise money for the budget, especially in the long run - even with Japan's relatively mild taxation, compared to, say, Europe, this effect is very pronounced. Basically, industries tend to move to lower-taxed regions or find new ways to evade taxes, people tend to limit their income and spending (both legally and illegally), and in the end, while you added more burden on the people, you rarely raise significantly more money. At the same time, the population as a whole is getting older, putting more and more strain on the overextended welfare system (and, actually, the defence spending is also rising). It doesn't help that apparently, most of the wives only do part-time work (or no work at all), effectively robbing the whole economy of something around a quarter of total potential value, which isn't exactly negligible. Again, that's what you get for bad tax policy - people get to keep more money if they work less, and they also get a lot more free time - a win-win for the common guy. Japan is a great example of very poor incentives over the past half a century - many economists were signalling the warning bells long before the problem got entirely out of hand, but the advocates of "increased government spending helps the economy" won out. And of course, this is still a very shallow look at the whole problem - I suspect there's many layers and many bad calls over the years. But the main problem is still that socialism simply doesn't work. If you look at the prominent socialist countries in the world, almost all run on a massive debt and print money like crazy, while all the services they provide are very subpar and expensive (after all, that's why such services are rarely voluntary :)). It used to be that you saved up for your retirement, putting money aside - saving on interest, and having the retirement you paid for. Now, the current earners pay for the current retirees - and usually with plans that assume huge population growth, that simply doesn't exist in reality - and Japan is quite on the bottom of the leaderboards of population growth to begin with.

    • @ThZuao
      @ThZuao Před 8 lety +124

      +Luaan wait...
      Japan is socialist? I never knew... Or maybe our conceptions of socialism are very, very different. Mine is state planned economy, as opposed to market economy (do not confuse with free market). This comes from Denmark's PM "Denmark is far from a socialist planned economy. Denmark is a market economy".
      Maybe, what you're referring to as socialism is welfare-ism?
      Keynesianism... running economies toward collapse since the 1930's.

    • @2kylesmith
      @2kylesmith Před 8 lety +56

      +Kenpachi Zaraki Japan got so much debt because investors don't think it is actually going to default...thus they are willing to give more money to Japan. The maker of this video happens to think he just knows more about economics than everyone who is holding Japanese debt. Which is doubtful.

    • @newvegasify1
      @newvegasify1 Před 8 lety +22

      +Kenpachi Zaraki Japan is still a cash based economy this allows businesses to lie about income and government spending is quite large I think in japan there is a joke about how every river has a concrete riverbed. Let us not forget that the working population has been declining meaning more and more money is diverted to senior benefits and healthcare which was already generous as is. Combined with japan being the country where people are living to 100+ this strain on benefits is a big part of their spending. Now with seniors being such a large part of the electorate they can't possibly pass social security reform such reform should have been passed in the 80's.
      Japan will collapse 2050-2070 by my guess
      This will cause massive shock to the Asian and world economy as they will cause South Korea to collapse as they to face a demographic crisis. With the collapse of South Korea this will affect China which will affect us. At best this will lead to a major recession or depression for us depending if china falls.
      www.acting-man.com/blog/media/2013/05/Japanese-government-expenditures.jpg
      www.acting-man.com/?p=23599

    • @anamarvelo
      @anamarvelo Před 8 lety +68

      +Thauã Aguirre there not socalist, the previous post is just trying to blame socalism for the problmes of a nation, whos suffering from a lot more
      also socalism dosnt exist anymore. when people say "Socailsim" they usally are refering to socail demoracy, witch is bascualy, a free market, funding good socail programs, taht feed back into the free market by reducting buiness and personal costs, by buying in bulk, and using the economies of scale

  • @TheMheadCondition
    @TheMheadCondition Před 7 lety +572

    That choice of music is very distracting

    • @peterjones3460
      @peterjones3460 Před 4 lety +1

      Thank you for saying this.

    • @ReStellar
      @ReStellar Před 2 lety

      No it's not. It's not meant to be entertaining; it's meant to be informative, so to do that he used a music/sound that highlight the theme of the problem: DEBTS!

  • @ShidaiTaino
    @ShidaiTaino Před 7 lety +1068

    Just keep selling Manga and they'll be fine

    • @alexchen5037
      @alexchen5037 Před 7 lety +91

      Ironically, manga and anime aren't even mainstream in Japan. They also don't get much money from international fans, since most of those read scanlations online or watch anime for free.
      Happily ever not-getting-paid-for-your-work!

    • @8NCLI8
      @8NCLI8 Před 7 lety +59

      Not true. Reading manga and watching anime is perfectly normal in Japan. Though most adults it's not shows like Fullmetal Alchemist and Death Note, but rather more down to earth stories that don't gain much popularity in the west.

    • @TheGuyNobodyReallyLikes
      @TheGuyNobodyReallyLikes Před 7 lety +11

      Why would anyone buy Manga/Anime when they can get it for free through piracy?

    • @8NCLI8
      @8NCLI8 Před 7 lety +33

      Because they presumably want manga/anime to keep getting made?

    • @alexchen5037
      @alexchen5037 Před 7 lety +24

      Seph Not always possible, unfortunately. In some countries, there is no legal way of acquiring such things, or there are no local or legal translations.
      Unless said people go out of their way to buy the Japanese versions-which they may not even understand-it is impossible for some to read and partake in anime and/or manga.
      People should try to support the creators though. Should.

  • @Accuaro
    @Accuaro Před 10 lety +1264

    This was actually very well done, and with clear visualized information, you definitely get a thumbs up.
    My hat's off to you sir. Well done.

    • @Addogram
      @Addogram  Před 10 lety +36

      Thank you NeoBlue :)

    • @chris-id6vk
      @chris-id6vk Před 8 lety +27

      +NeoBlue weaboo.

    • @DanielleTinkov
      @DanielleTinkov Před 8 lety +18

      +NeoBlue no it's not. It's simplistic and wrong on almost every point.

    • @johnb8319
      @johnb8319 Před 8 lety +3

      +Addogram damn japan is in a shithole

    • @penguinwithagun342
      @penguinwithagun342 Před 8 lety +4

      +stringduality There are more important issue's then to dislike other's interests.

  • @afonsords
    @afonsords Před 9 lety +123

    I feel like governments should be prohibited from spending more than they collect - that doesn't make much sense to me. It might be good in the short run but definitely not in the long run.

    • @ronaldderooij1774
      @ronaldderooij1774 Před 9 lety +8

      afonsords That is exactly the policy of the European Union written down in the Maastricht Treaty.

    • @afonsords
      @afonsords Před 9 lety +6

      Ronald de Rooij wait but that treaty is older than me, how come we already had a sovereign debt crisis here then? Every government has been spending more than they collect

    • @ronaldderooij1774
      @ronaldderooij1774 Před 9 lety +16

      afonsords Because in 1992 it was agreed that countries had time until 2017. Which was too long.

    • @afonsords
      @afonsords Před 9 lety +1

      Ronald de Rooij Oh that's unfortunate x)

    • @EvelynDayless
      @EvelynDayless Před 9 lety

      Ronald de Rooij If by exactly you mean not remotely... The treaty defined the degrees of debt allowed. It's actually a good thing to maintain some debt in a lot of cases.

  • @user-gx9xf2zb6o
    @user-gx9xf2zb6o Před 3 lety +21

    Japan's debt is from the people.
    They can just print yen to pay for it, but the value of the money goes down.
    The low interest rate is also the reason why Japan has few problems.
    Greece's bonds are held by foreign countries and the currency is shared.
    So when they run out of money, they will have problems.

    • @richard35791
      @richard35791 Před 2 lety

      isnt that good for yen to depreciate?

    • @aarengraves9962
      @aarengraves9962 Před 2 lety

      No exacly, theyr are held by the EU.
      And countries like Italy Spain and Greece cant print money if Brussels doesnt give the okey.

    • @ssuwandi3240
      @ssuwandi3240 Před rokem

      Exactly I just chimed in in the other post. Greece and US Sovereigned Bond by nature is very unstable for example these days central banks are dumping US Treasury in order to inject and stabilize their own currency. Result is toughening export from US and 8% high inflation. This video does not cover the bond ownership and Japan decades yields control policies at all

    • @collie8
      @collie8 Před rokem

      exactly two people, Suzuki and Sony :) good luck

  • @hh481
    @hh481 Před 7 lety +258

    this is really uncomfortable to listen, the music and monotone voice are just weird

    • @boomperson818
      @boomperson818 Před 6 lety +3

      jesus the music makes me feel very uncomfortable

  • @DanHowardMtl
    @DanHowardMtl Před 8 lety +112

    Downvote for awful too loud music

    • @christiansaldana4200
      @christiansaldana4200 Před 8 lety +20

      +Dan Howard downvote for being a little bitch

    • @DanHowardMtl
      @DanHowardMtl Před 8 lety +1

      Christian Saldana Downvote for being a fucktard ass chewer.

    • @christiansaldana4200
      @christiansaldana4200 Před 8 lety +13

      ***** You're the type of person who would call the manager at McDonalds.

    • @DanHowardMtl
      @DanHowardMtl Před 8 lety

      Christian Saldana You're the type of person... you're not a type of person. You're a fucken hatched troll.

    • @christiansaldana4200
      @christiansaldana4200 Před 8 lety +6

      +Dan Howard o nice one

  • @jakofozz
    @jakofozz Před 10 lety +148

    Has someone actually ever paid you money via paypal?

    • @Addogram
      @Addogram  Před 10 lety +48

      Nope, not yet.

    • @jakofozz
      @jakofozz Před 10 lety +1

      I'm starting a financial literacy channel. I could use some of your animation styles. I manage a local Branch of a big four bank here in Australia. I am not good at graphics and only ok at post production. If you are good at either I would love to know more about you. PM me if you're interested jmdyason@gmail.com

    • @DeanMasley
      @DeanMasley Před 10 lety +12

      Addogram I bet if you used bitcoin you'd receive a lot more

    • @Addogram
      @Addogram  Před 10 lety +34

      Dean Masley Thanks for the tip Dean. Now accepting bitcoin.

    • @DeanMasley
      @DeanMasley Před 10 lety +3

      Addogram let me know if you have any questions! Amazing animations!
      I'm sure if you post your talents in /r/jobs4bitcoins on reddit you'd receive some good responses (and maybe a job!)
      I've been doing minor graphic design this way and I wouldn't look back. Bitcoin. Is the freaking best. Get paid from anywhere in the world and then cash out to your local currency (if desired!) Through your regular setup

  • @yubakrarai
    @yubakrarai Před rokem +3

    8 years after, Japan still lives on.

    • @Olav3D
      @Olav3D Před rokem +1

      Yet the video is more relevant than ever. Inflation is at 4% now, soon they will have to increase interest rates, high chance of disaster.

  • @mojave3571
    @mojave3571 Před 7 lety

    Hey, thank you for this, it was really well done, keep working on these videos you do it great!

  • @PINGPONGROCKSBRAH
    @PINGPONGROCKSBRAH Před 7 lety +551

    The music is annoying

  • @Tilim1st
    @Tilim1st Před 7 lety +418

    OMG, the backround music is terrible.

    • @Talik13
      @Talik13 Před 7 lety +24

      Oh good I thought I was the only one. I seriously can't watch it. The music makes me anxious.

    • @mohd5997
      @mohd5997 Před 7 lety +3

      thnx God i'm not alone

    • @Realdagdag
      @Realdagdag Před 7 lety +6

      i am not alone!!! the beat kept stopping and giving the wrong vibe and i was suffering from the god awful music

    • @yulwu6758
      @yulwu6758 Před 7 lety

      i guess thats wot its supposed to make u feel

    • @danielmoreno657
      @danielmoreno657 Před 7 lety

      You can always push the close captions button.

  • @nnn-pr3vr
    @nnn-pr3vr Před 7 lety

    I, for one, enjoyed the background music. Great vid!

  • @paulkemp4484
    @paulkemp4484 Před 6 lety +4

    The background music literally gave me anxiety . Love it

  • @DanielleTinkov
    @DanielleTinkov Před 8 lety +87

    It's interesting to see how debt works through the eyes of a teenager :D , real life though... nothing of the sort. The video misses any economy growth and the fact that Japan doesn't have a trade deficit, but a trade surplus... actually it have the 4th biggest trade surplus in the world after China, Germany and Saudi Arabia. What the authors of the video miss, or more likely don't know, is that default doesn't come as a function of too much borrowing, but when you're unable to pay due to diminishing returns from government investment. Imagine the government needs a new bridge that connects two provinces. The bridge is projected to increase the economy and therefore, the revenue by 5%. The government decides to borrow the money for the bridge on an interest of 2%. Everything is nice and dandy, but building the bridge takes far too long and during that time Pear Inc. invents flying cars. The new car quickly picks up and most people commute between provinces in flying cars. The bridge gets built eventually, but due to the new transportation method instead of generating 5% increase in revenue it only generates 1.5%. Now the government has to pay for the bridge and the interest and doesn't get the needed revenue from the private sector to finance its debt. Now that's what happened in Greece and pretty much any country that ever defaulted. Japan and the USA are so far off from this kind of thing that it's even funny to think about it. In the words of Dick Cheney - "deficits don't matter". Now stop spreading misinformation on the Internet and find a better place for your money, maybe buy some government bonds or whatnot.

    • @SensibleLad1997
      @SensibleLad1997 Před 8 lety +7

      wow really interesting, thanks for the comment!

    • @GhostInTheShell29
      @GhostInTheShell29 Před 8 lety +10

      +Daniel Tinkov The big issue with Japan though is their GDP is more likely to shrink then it is to grow. With so much of the population retiring and so few new workers, it will take a lot of economic growth just to maintain their current GDP level. And the amount of economic increases needed to maintain the economy is only going to get higher.

    • @DanielleTinkov
      @DanielleTinkov Před 8 lety +3

      GhostInTheShell29 as long as the GDP shrink doesn't outpace the population decline everything's fine.
      Imagine that Japan have GDP of 100 and population of 80. The population shrinks to 60, but the economy only to 80. The result is that the GDP per capita increased from 1.25 to 1.33.

    • @danielconnell1331
      @danielconnell1331 Před 8 lety

      +Daniel Tinkov Yes but with an ageing population, government expenditures will increase.

    • @DanielleTinkov
      @DanielleTinkov Před 8 lety +3

      Daniel Connell yup, that's why Japan invests so heavily in robotics. That's the only way to keep the expenditures under control.

  • @MrLoger3
    @MrLoger3 Před 7 lety +782

    great vid, horrrible background music

  • @oliver92
    @oliver92 Před 3 lety +4

    Every year I rewatch this video and understand it a bit more. I reckon on 2 more years I will fully understand it

  • @MJtheFellowActuary
    @MJtheFellowActuary Před 7 lety +223

    Japanese Interest rate is now negative. Hence they make money by lending. Regulation forces Institutional Investors to buy bonds despite the negative return. Japan doesn't have a debt problem since that 'interest rate tray" in the video is now a source of income and not an expense due to negative interest rates.

    • @BraceletGrolf
      @BraceletGrolf Před 6 lety +17

      MJ the Student Actuary ye but this video is old

    • @supa3ek
      @supa3ek Před 6 lety +7

      Lol you are dumb if you think that !

    • @YHSun-ux1cr
      @YHSun-ux1cr Před 6 lety +20

      negative interest rate? more of a glorified donation.

    • @ericpreble674
      @ericpreble674 Před 6 lety +26

      The problem is "regulation forces institutional investors to" effectively donate to the government. Means there's no fiscal incentive to invest so people will do other things with their money

    • @edwardkostreski6733
      @edwardkostreski6733 Před 6 lety +15

      How can they force them to buy negative interest bonds?

  • @brickstunram9391
    @brickstunram9391 Před 8 lety +145

    Does this music give anybody else a panic attack ?

  • @AnthonySenpaikun
    @AnthonySenpaikun Před 7 lety +218

    a price to be paid for that 1 week sinkhole repair achievement.

    • @gargos25
      @gargos25 Před 7 lety +5

      Hahaha

    • @eemaanakhany
      @eemaanakhany Před 7 lety +2

      hahahahaha i nearly spit out my food, hilarious

    • @AnthonySenpaikun
      @AnthonySenpaikun Před 7 lety +6

      www.theguardian.com/world/2016/nov/15/japan-fixes-vast-fukuoka-city-sinkhole-repaired-two-days
      here. imagine how much they paid just to repair that for 2 days knowing how big their dept is already.

    • @HammerLeaf
      @HammerLeaf Před 7 lety +2

      paid*

    • @AnthonySenpaikun
      @AnthonySenpaikun Před 7 lety +2

      right. tnx

  • @CarlosSilva-td3nn
    @CarlosSilva-td3nn Před 2 lety

    Excellent. Well used graphics, straight line of thoughts, very agreeable voice.
    Thank you

  • @amechidawuda-wodu1346
    @amechidawuda-wodu1346 Před 6 lety +3

    the beat is so good i got distracted like twice

  • @gwho
    @gwho Před 7 lety +41

    Other parts of the video could use some unpacking of some of the terminology/steps 3:15
    "If central banks tries to grow tax revenue, investors sell their bonds to account for inflation. This pushes up average debt costs"
    SO many skipped steps. This part could use better explanation.

  • @Lestibournes
    @Lestibournes Před 8 lety +198

    The real problem is that Japan's fertility rate is lower than replacement level. As a result Japan's population is shrinking, the number of workers is decreasing, the economy is shrinking, and the elderly are growing as a segment of the population.

    • @personanon9772
      @personanon9772 Před 8 lety +13

      Mostly because of technology, it's 'mor culture' and how women when married have to become house wives and treat the husband like a child.

    • @Hubrisza
      @Hubrisza Před 8 lety +51

      Honestly even if Japan didn't have the aging population it did, it would still be in serious trouble. This fact just speeds up the inevitable cancer of uncontrolled public spending.

    • @requiemforamerica8432
      @requiemforamerica8432 Před 8 lety +13

      The population would have to grow EXPONENTIALLY in order to create enough tax base, and that's just untenable since we have finite space on earth.

    • @ZarconVideo
      @ZarconVideo Před 8 lety +3

      Economy needs growth. Lower population = less growth.

    • @steved2667
      @steved2667 Před 8 lety +4

      Import more workers or run current account deficits...Japan is Monetarily Sovereign and has complete control over its sovereign finances and all of the laws and regulations related to its finances (fiscal/monetary policy)...

  • @Pan_Z
    @Pan_Z Před 7 lety +111

    This is good info, but damn, heavy metal would've been better than whatever the hell is playing in this video

  • @ricardo_boutique
    @ricardo_boutique Před 7 lety

    I liked the video. I actually also enjoyed the background music lol

  • @jsnadrian
    @jsnadrian Před 7 lety +200

    Kind of misleading .. Japan's central bank has reduced interest rates by repurchasing a lot of its own debt. It 'owes' that money to itself. So it kind of cancels out...

    • @kafaddafak6908
      @kafaddafak6908 Před 7 lety +19

      Jason Adrian True, but when the need to shrink the money supply comes; who is going to be willing to buy IOUs from the central bank. the moment the central bank announces that it's selling IOUs the market for them (IOUs) crashes.

    • @smartpants6
      @smartpants6 Před 7 lety +1

      Exactly, the banks would need to be bailed out, but that seems problematic, considering Japan doesn't seem to have the big reserves the U.S. has to maintain inflation. I mean, it wouldn't surprise me if Japanese people start having to carry around big wheelbarrows of money to buy a loaf of bread :D Of course, that's just a bit of an exaggeration

    • @ayush_dwr12
      @ayush_dwr12 Před 7 lety +9

      I was wondering the same thing - the central bank is printing money and so all it does is raise inflation. It basically equates to the Japanese govt. printing money to pay interest and other expenses, instead of borrowing it. (This is just my understanding though)

    • @ayush_dwr12
      @ayush_dwr12 Před 7 lety

      Grey Warden I see, so you're saying that they should try to create demand with the printed money instead of adding supply

    • @jsnadrian
      @jsnadrian Před 7 lety +1

      The inflation targeting strikes me as a bit misguided. Monetary policy seems like an inappropriate tool to combat Japan's problems, namely population stagnation.
      Still, if it's IOUs between government entities, I don't see the danger.

  • @AK-mv1yc
    @AK-mv1yc Před 9 lety +20

    Japan has it's own currency, (sovereign currency) thus controls it. A country cannot go insolvent if it owns it's own currency

    • @SirRavenEX
      @SirRavenEX Před 9 lety +7

      Yes! Finally some sanity in the sea of ignorant comments. Doesn't ANYONE realise Japan is a monetary sovereign and CANNOT GO INSOLVENT? (also long as the debt is in it's own currency) And thankfully, they are smart enough to have debt only in yen, instead of foreign debt. People have been moaning about the "crisis" of Japan for freaking 30 years now. Japan is NOT in a crisis! If anything the recent sales tax hike is going to contract the economy, which is where it REALLY matters.

    • @AyushJuneja
      @AyushJuneja Před 9 lety +1

      Adam Kennedy SirRaven Depending upon what Japan does with it's own currency, Japan can have all three (or even four scenarios):
      1. It can go insolvent by not printing enough causing it to default (highly unlikely)
      2. Experience uncontrolled rapid maybe even uncontrolled inflation (still v. unlikely if only due to history and financial culture) by printing enough to fulfill both interest and reduce total debt amounts.
      3.Degrading value of security/bonds in international market ( situation that currently exists and most likely scenario). Will keep happening as risk of default keeps steadily increasing hence demanding higher interest rates in international markets.
      However this scenario will have the least impact as most of Japan's debt is owned by Japanese investors and due to deflation/low inflation making low interest rates viable. This situation can likely last decades before coming to critical levels. And in that much time various reforms can stabilize the situation:
      1. Decreased spending on benefits: Either through reform or due to decrease in elderly population, simply because the highest population section is the post WW2 pop. likely to die off in significant numbers in this decade.
      2. Boom in GDP due to emerging service/industry line growth. (perhaps unlikely for japan unless robotics experiences a boom, a field in which they have significant competitive advantage.)
      3. Immigration/Corporate culture reform: Two avenues which clearly exist for Japan which may offer significant increase in GDP due to lowering of costs/increasing efficiency. However less likely as it faces societal pressures which are v. difficult to change.

    • @hckytwn3192
      @hckytwn3192 Před 9 lety +8

      Adam, pure solvency is irrelevant, hyperinflation is though. And Raven, the whole point of the video is to show that Japan needs foreign inflows to make ends meet. They're a country with an aging and declining population that has very little natural resources. If their money is worthless, because they keep printing it, they'll have nothing... it'll be a disaster.

    • @AK-mv1yc
      @AK-mv1yc Před 9 lety

      Mike S Remember though, hyperinflation is caused under extreme circumstances (Germany - post WW1 and Zimbabwe) The export market would have to collapse completely and depend purely on imports. I advise reading the blog link posted below
      bilbo.economicoutlook.net/blog/?p=3773

    • @MrKT410
      @MrKT410 Před 9 lety

      Adam Kennedy What currency must they pay the debt back in? I'm not sure of the answer, but lets say Japan's debt payment being 200% of GDP must be paid back in the equivalent amount in $US. Since the dollar is the world reserve currency I would imagine this is very likely. For simplicity lets say this is $10 trillion USD or $1,000 trillion Yen (exchange rate is about 1USD:120 Yen). If Japan begins printing money to pay back their debt, inflation will rise due to lowering the amount of each Yen even further. Lets say Japan manages to print so much that they lower the Yen value by 50%. That same $10 trillion USD is now 2,000 trillion Yen. So, attempting to pay back the money in inflation will not work long term and could lead to hyperinflation. I'll take a default over a hyper-inflationary event.

  • @anthonydunn729
    @anthonydunn729 Před 7 lety +15

    Tha fuck made the tray wider like that? Kind of an important detail to gloss over...

    • @SolidSnake59
      @SolidSnake59 Před 7 lety +4

      I guess the height of tray is level of interest, and area of tray is amount of money borrowed, so if you borrowed 100$ at 5% interest you will have to return 5$, but if you borrow 200$ at the same interes you will have to return 10$.
      This is how I understand this, anyone else have any idea?

    • @josephyang4997
      @josephyang4997 Před 7 lety +3

      The total debt amount = tray width. So the more $ the government borrows the wider the tray.

  • @hyperxx99
    @hyperxx99 Před 6 lety

    Loved this explanation and the music is catchy.

  • @BoogsterSU2
    @BoogsterSU2 Před 8 lety +50

    Not even anime, manga, or weird food could help save Japan's debt problem. :(

    • @bejhouhuy2567
      @bejhouhuy2567 Před 8 lety +10

      +Boogster Su dont forget porn...

    • @joshuaosei5628
      @joshuaosei5628 Před 8 lety +14

      +Bejho Uhuy
      Hentai?

    • @dustintacohands1107
      @dustintacohands1107 Před 8 lety +1

      +Boogster Su awesome food mmmmm sushi

    • @elbobo100
      @elbobo100 Před 8 lety +2

      +Boogster Su I guess japan will have to invade china again

    • @joshuaosei5628
      @joshuaosei5628 Před 8 lety

      Bob Breckur Funny, Japan is a pretty small country with not as much testing land as China, yet they stand a chance. A pretty small one, but a chance nonetheless.

  • @lekhoavu1814
    @lekhoavu1814 Před 7 lety +179

    do you have a non bgm version? im fine with voices, but this noise is out of the question.

  • @FlagFlyingHigh3
    @FlagFlyingHigh3 Před 7 lety

    I watched this for 5 seconds and subscribed. Like the graphics

  • @25fpslagger81
    @25fpslagger81 Před 2 lety

    I still remember watching this video as a kid , it was and is very fascinating

  • @AdobadoFantastico
    @AdobadoFantastico Před 7 lety +36

    Why's Japan's Debt a problem, but the US's is a crisis? To me it looks quite reverse. A lot of the debt the US gvmt owes is to itself(borrowing against social security). Which sucks, but it's a way easier problem to handle than Japan's Debt. Especially given that we have a much larger, more robust, and less stagnant economy.
    The video also casually asserts the debt to be around 80k per capita....but never addresses whether those investors are capable of paying it down themselves(eating the losses). Which is precisely because they *are* capable of doing that, and Cato Institute's not so subtle biases(agendas) are showing through. Video is only entertaining whether the government or the broader population should make a sacrifice for the good of the country. Not whether the investors(who benefit the most from all of that borrowing in the first place, since it's typically used to subsidize and grow industries they own or invest in) should be the ones to bite the bullet. The investors are also the ones who stand to lose the least from such a sacrifice, since they have distributed assets beyond just the bonds. None of them are going to be destitute from such a loss. But the government would collapse, and the population would be left SOL if either were required to personally take the hit.

    • @michaelvanwagenen6599
      @michaelvanwagenen6599 Před 7 lety +2

      Anguel Roumenov Bogoev How about you fix it?

    • @Teppishc
      @Teppishc Před 7 lety

      Surely when the government defaults, that's precisely what happens? And after that, who wants to invest? and those that do will surely charge higher rates because of increased perceived risk?

    • @AdobadoFantastico
      @AdobadoFantastico Před 7 lety +3

      Teppishc Smith Of course it's not *good* in any of the circumstances.
      The point was to briefly highlight deliberate oversights and simplifications in the video. Situation isn't as straight forward as their deceptive metaphors frame it, nor is it such a foregone conclusion that everyone's simply fucked.

    • @AdobadoFantastico
      @AdobadoFantastico Před 7 lety +1

      Michael Van Wagenen I tried, but the populace saw fit to go a different direction with their votes. Only so much an individual or small group of people can do, ya know?

    • @Zsnakeoo
      @Zsnakeoo Před 7 lety +3

      Bank of Japan is the main holder of the Japanese debt, along with other national investors, to about 90%.
      In the case of the US, a tremendous part is held by foreign investors (~30%).
      Social Security funds represent a way smaller part.

  • @WiseSilverWolf
    @WiseSilverWolf Před 8 lety +9

    It would be cool if they made an updated version of this for 2016-2017

  • @Heihachiro504
    @Heihachiro504 Před 7 lety +1

    The background music is too "trippy" and makes watching the video a mental challenge.

  • @nieschalghosh4702
    @nieschalghosh4702 Před 7 lety +1

    fantasticaly done

  • @RoroTheDeer
    @RoroTheDeer Před 8 lety +27

    THE MUSIC IS SO DAMN LOUD

  • @bobsmith-ov3kn
    @bobsmith-ov3kn Před 7 lety +240

    As well done as this is, the vast majority of people are going to watch this and still come away just as ignorant and clueless as they were before.

    • @Azhucabomb
      @Azhucabomb Před 5 lety +14

      The only thing I don’t understand is why the interest expense tray gets wider.

    • @redangrybird7564
      @redangrybird7564 Před 5 lety +14

      @@Azhucabomb Because the total debt continues growing, the amount of interest payed grows even the interest rate remains the same.

    • @ragvirsinghhothi8848
      @ragvirsinghhothi8848 Před 5 lety +11

      @@Azhucabomb it's compounding interest so the interest rate stays the same but your interest is added as debt. Basically you have 100 dollars debt and for interest rate 5 percent you pay 5 dollars interest the next year you rate stays the same but it's from 105 dollars so it's more than 5 dollars of interest the next year

    • @TheChickenRiceBowl
      @TheChickenRiceBowl Před 5 lety +2

      @@ragvirsinghhothi8848 Jesus fucking Christ that's terrible. No wonder people kill themselves over debt. That should be illegal.

    • @limboproductions224
      @limboproductions224 Před 4 lety +6

      @@TheChickenRiceBowl dude compound interest is what literally every bank uses worldwide lol

  • @timebank1949
    @timebank1949 Před 4 lety

    I got head ache from the music in the background!
    Besides, I think that the message of the video is so devastating BECAUSE OF THE MUSIC IN THE BACKGROUND!

  • @B7tB
    @B7tB Před 5 lety

    Awesome video, and for the record I kinda like the music

  • @natansandle8016
    @natansandle8016 Před 7 lety +33

    I really tried to understand this but the music makes it impossible.
    I don't exactly know how, but it does.

  • @axelrosalewski
    @axelrosalewski Před 8 lety +50

    6:30 What comes after this "game over"? Please explain!

    • @TheForklifter
      @TheForklifter Před 8 lety +12

      If a "game over" ever happens that probably means the economy collapse. Plus, some riots and angry protestors occur.

    • @MajSigmaE
      @MajSigmaE Před 8 lety +12

      Look to Greece as an example, however Germany ended up bailing them out. More than likely the aftermath would be to a higher degree though

    • @gapodo
      @gapodo Před 8 lety +8

      +Axel Rosalewski Take a look at the US
      -> printing money
      -> going to war to bring "democracy" to countries which are thinking about not using US-Dollars as their trading currency for oil (as the US heavily depends on the fact that the world is trading in USD or at least was, EUR and other currencies are getting heavier use nowadays)
      -> Hoping that other countries belief in you or force them to say that they belief... (the US would be "game over" or more precisely bankrupt for quite some time now...)
      -> the US indirectly declared their bankruptcy in 1971 (long story short: they refused to exchange USD to gold which was a clear sign of bankruptcy at that time) nothing happened
      -> in 2011 the US was bankrupt for some days before they found new debt holders (or creditors ? I'm not a native speaker, so I'm not quite sure which one is the financial English version...)
      -> in 2013 the US had to "shut down"... as the budget was extremely tight (other countries would have had to declare bankruptcy the US hat other ways, which included 800,000 state employees which were "given" unpaid holidays
      -> i could make this list way bigger as there were "almost bankruptcies" before 1971 and also way more in recent times...
      =>> the way the US solves this problem: they just increase the debt limit

    • @anamarvelo
      @anamarvelo Před 8 lety

      +Michael Amann you know that saddam euro theroy was disproven right? the wiki-leak documets show that iraq was not some master plan to get oil, it was really a lot simpler and sadder. wiki leak documest show that geroge bush was planning hte ivasion since he first got into office, becase he wanted to remove saddam hussien, to improve his fathers legacy. also i dont think you undersnatd what the debt limit is. or US finaces at all

    • @gapodo
      @gapodo Před 8 lety

      +anamarvelo i have never said it was to get oil (allthough interestinly countries with oil always need the US type of democracy...) Husseins decision to change to EUR was the trigger....
      Also i understand the US debt limit... it is a artificial limit, but it represents the willingness of countries to lend the US money quite well...

  • @boogerking7411
    @boogerking7411 Před 6 lety +1

    How much is the interest rate per annum does the gov. pay when they borrow from locals or foreign sources? Is that 1 percent per year or per month?

  • @saireddy6261
    @saireddy6261 Před 3 lety

    Could someone please explain why the 'interest expense tray becomes wider' (at 2:30)? Thanks.

  • @kamome3813
    @kamome3813 Před 7 lety +7

    Money is more distributed among the people in Japan and Japanese banks hold their money. More than 80% of Japanese bond is held by pension funds and banks so I can say the government debt is Japanese people's savings. Japan does not default as far as they do not withdraw all their money very sudden.

  • @doroteja1990
    @doroteja1990 Před 9 lety +24

    I'm sorry, but the music you picked for this video totally distracts from listening the narrator. Or, you could have lowered the volume of the song.

  • @Shawnmyrelle
    @Shawnmyrelle Před rokem +1

    I miss this channel so much

  • @dbrunskill
    @dbrunskill Před 7 lety

    Can you make an updated version of this? Would like to know how Japan is getting on...

  • @Twiggy163
    @Twiggy163 Před 10 lety +56

    And yet Japan's debt problem is not as bad as the US'. Because most of Japan's debt is held by it's own citizens.

    • @Twiggy163
      @Twiggy163 Před 10 lety +2

      ***** and 95% in Japan. No, the US is not in a better position and will end up like Greece. One of the few reason it has not done so sooner is because the US is a lot bigger.

    • @se7ensnakes
      @se7ensnakes Před 10 lety +1

      *****
      Public debt is 17 trillion and personal debt is 14 trillion but there is only 4 trillion fed notes world wide. What are banks lending? Who is buying 17 trillion dollars worth of bonds when there is only 4 trillions in hard currency? What particular coinage act made the electronic money legal tender?

    • @se7ensnakes
      @se7ensnakes Před 10 lety +7

      *****
      Most of the money for financing was created out of thin air by banks. This means that when a person borrows money to buy a house, the bank simply creates the money there and then with a few keystrokes. The general public believes that the money is originating from savings but that is simply not true.

    • @mfpleite
      @mfpleite Před 10 lety +1

      se7ensnakes
      There is a legal reserve money that banks must possess. From the money they have lent, they are obliged by law to have, say 10% in the vault. When a country prints money they already account for that.

    • @se7ensnakes
      @se7ensnakes Před 10 lety +4

      Thats not correct The bank create the money they loan. They look for the reserves later.

  • @Cyfix15
    @Cyfix15 Před 8 lety +37

    who are they going into debt to.....themselves?
    the entire monetary economic system is garbage

    • @TheForklifter
      @TheForklifter Před 8 lety +6

      +SoldierCyfix Investors mainly. In Greece and the U.S.'s case they owe to other countries. The U.S. owes money to China, Japan, Corporations, Banks, oil exporters, social security, and other countries and Greece owes a ton of money to Germany and the EU.

    • @Cyfix15
      @Cyfix15 Před 8 lety +1

      the planet is in debt to itself ?

    • @TheForklifter
      @TheForklifter Před 8 lety +3

      In the grand scheme of things, yes. Thunny thing is, is that the majority of European countries are in debt, except for Switzerland, Norway, and a few Eastern European nations. All of them that are in debt are part of the European Union

    • @Cyfix15
      @Cyfix15 Před 8 lety +9

      I was just trying to point out the absurdity. when you look at the world from a realistic standpoint. all the countries being in debt to each other (all the planet in debt) is very nonsensical

    • @sevret313
      @sevret313 Před 8 lety +1

      +SovietTenkDestroyer That's one thing people need to be aware of. Net debt is rarely listed, only outstanding debt. So both US and Japan have much less debt as % of GDP than some sources list.

  • @dragonfly1929
    @dragonfly1929 Před 6 lety +1

    VERYEDUCATIONAL ,THANKS!

  • @HS-819
    @HS-819 Před 7 lety +1

    Well explained video. I didn't get the widening of interest rate based on the central bank actions but that is a bit complicated when you are new to economics.

  • @se7ensnakes
    @se7ensnakes Před 10 lety +19

    When Japan lost the war in 1945 the Allies power inflicted a debt system on them: Private Commercial Banks create money out of thin air but the government has to borrow it. The people are not educated fully on the problem with fractional reserve lending and so the problem continues.

    • @se7ensnakes
      @se7ensnakes Před 10 lety +1

      Japan is a quadrillion yens in debt. Russia is no exception as they are also captured. The USA's banks control every aspect of society starting with Woodrow Wilson Opened who opened hells gates.
      Today the Federal Reserve's policy led to "investors euphoria" and Liars loans and to a bust which cause many foreclosures. The Family median networth dropped 40% to $77,300 in 2010 from $126,400 in 2007, the Fed said in its Survey of Consumer Finances which is released every three years. Presently there are 19 million homes and 8 million homeless. Tomorrow if your children decide they want to own a home they are going to labor most of their lives to pay a 30 year mortgage on a home that the bank got for free.
      The funny thing is that the mainstream media that are reporting these are actually owned by these SUPER ENTITIES.
      According to The Swiss Federal Institute (SFI) in Zurich released a study entitled “The Network of Global Corporate Control” that proves a small group have global economic control:
      www.sg.ethz.ch/media/medialibrary/2013/12/james_glatteth-2007-02.pdf
      The funny thing is that most of the mainstream media that are reporting this are actually owned by these SUPER ENTITIES.
      CNBC
      www.cnbc.com/id/45018010
      A core of just 147 firms - many of them financial companies - control 40 percent of the wealth of 43,060 transnational corporations. A broader core of 737 control 80 percent, according to the theorists.
      HUFFINGPOST
      www.huffingtonpost.ca/2011/10/24/super-entity-147-global-economy-swiss-researchers_n_1028690.html
      A Swiss study appears to have uncovered what anti-capitalist activists have been claiming for years -- that the global economy is controlled by a small group of deeply interconnected entities.
      NEW SCIENTIST
      www.newscientist.com/article/mg21228354.500-revealed--the-capitalist-network-that-runs-the-world.html#.UxF0CJUX7zs
      "AS PROTESTS against financial power sweep the world this week, science may have confirmed the protesters' worst fears. An analysis of the relationships between 43,000 transnational corporations has identified a relatively small group of companies, mainly banks, with disproportionate power over the global economy."
      FORBES
      www.forbes.com/sites/bruceupbin/2011/10/22/the-147-companies-that-control-everything/
      Three systems theorists at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich have taken a database listing 37 million companies and investors worldwide and analyzed all 43,060 transnational corporations and share ownerships linking them. They built a model of who owns what and what their revenues are and mapped the whole edifice of economic power.

    • @se7ensnakes
      @se7ensnakes Před 10 lety

      *****
      You cannot bet on something that has already occurred, unless you find people that do not see the inherent problem. However, If you believe that Iam here to happily dwell on the failure of the American experiment you are sadly mistaken. i have lived in America for a rather long time and I can readily tell you that there has been a revolutionary change for the worse. I believe that the USA is in capture.
      Any significant law is the result of lobbyist. That local government as well as the federal government is fully engulfed in corruption. That the wars that we are engaged in is as Smedley Butler described, a racket. We are exporting more death machines by far more than any country in the world: www.sipri.org/research/armaments/production/Top100. Our money is manipulated by private owners of banks in secret conference rooms. These Banks perpetuate business cycles using counterfeit money. And the job market is dismal.
      We are not leaving a nice situation for the people of the future. I wish I could be as optimistic as you.

    • @se7ensnakes
      @se7ensnakes Před 10 lety +1

      Are you kidding me? You missed out on a lot of things. First machine flight, radio, television, ford assembly line, Thomas Edison with his variety of patents including the light bulb. On the side of Politics we had great presidents like George Washington, Andrew Jackson, Abraham Lincoln. Yet today we are dominated by a shadow government that is the same for nearly every country.the world. Our jobs are migrating to japan and many people here are unemployed. Many people lost their homes in the last asset bubble, and the ownership of major corporations appear to be monopolized.
      What more we are leading in an escalating race to build the most destrutive weapons in the world: Rail guns, scramjet hypersonic thermonuclear missiles. i wish we get a president of the vision that JFK had with space exploration.

    • @se7ensnakes
      @se7ensnakes Před 10 lety

      All this and just are scarce, 78% of our income goes to pay taxes, health insurance and debt.

    • @wtfsincerlyjapan
      @wtfsincerlyjapan Před 10 lety

      the central bank is not private it is a division of the government in most countries and in most countries private banks cannot print money

  • @cruxdraloor8950
    @cruxdraloor8950 Před 7 lety +137

    This video is really informative and well made but the music is obnoxious and really loud

  • @costelloj70
    @costelloj70 Před 7 lety +3

    The music is ok it just needs to be lowered in volume by 50% so its ambient background music.

  • @zdenekholobrada4071
    @zdenekholobrada4071 Před 7 lety

    Can you please explain how you came to ratio of 1:23 of debt to tax revenues when I came to ratio of 1:8. Thanks.

  • @lordreign9819
    @lordreign9819 Před 7 lety +19

    first of all, unlike USA central bank - Federal Reserve, the central bank is belong to government, secondly it is domestic debt, thirdly debted moeny, no way you are reducing debt without affecting money circulation

    • @emadgholam9370
      @emadgholam9370 Před 7 lety +8

      Central banks belong to the government? Dont make me laugh. Central banks are owned by a few rich families.

    • @lordreign9819
      @lordreign9819 Před 7 lety +5

      emad gholam what i mean central bank of japan is not privately owned

    • @ezralimm
      @ezralimm Před 7 lety

      not in many countries. USA is an exception not a rule. Not that this is a good thing, as one bad government can fuck it up big time. See Nigeria.

    • @iamlordeyayaya4976
      @iamlordeyayaya4976 Před 7 lety

      emad gholam Please don't preach your crazy conspiracy theories here. skeptoid.com/blog/2014/04/07/busting-some-rothschild-family-facebook-memes/

  • @faustus2058
    @faustus2058 Před 7 lety +74

    Interesting, but a little over my head. Complex economics confuse me. Well done though.

    • @quantummechanist1
      @quantummechanist1 Před 7 lety +3

      It's confusing because it's actually wrong.
      When you hear talk of foreign investors coming over and investing in your country without any talk of where they might exchange their currency for your local currency, it is then that you know that the person speaking knows very little about what is actually going on.
      I suggest you look up some names to get a better idea: Stephanie Kelton, Warren Mosler, Randall Wray, Michael Hudson. They have talks on CZcams.

    • @faustus2058
      @faustus2058 Před 7 lety

      A Word In the Wind
      Thanks for the tip.

    • @faustus2058
      @faustus2058 Před 7 lety +1

      *****
      Can you explain why? In the classes I've taken (which is only a few) relating to economics, any bank note/Yen that is created that is printed without the value created in the economy to back it up causes inflation. In other words, if the markets of japan only create, let's say, one million Yen worth of goods/services, then the value of one Yen would go down if 1.1 million Yen was printed. Is that not true?

    • @ultimanada3558
      @ultimanada3558 Před 7 lety

      You are assuming that if Japan can create one million Yen worth of goods/services...that the demand for those goods and services stay the same. Demand is the other moving factor used to determine price and ultimately inflation.

    • @AcianaC
      @AcianaC Před 7 lety +1

      smoke more weed jastroyer, smoke more weed.

  • @Zet9th
    @Zet9th Před 5 lety +1

    Great music! I love it!

  • @ichuisaac123
    @ichuisaac123 Před 7 lety +47

    I'm an economics major and I'm ashamed to say that i have no idea what this guy is talking about. (the horrendous music didn't help either) :(

    • @stufoo
      @stufoo Před 7 lety +14

      Its called quantitative easing. If you really want to understand something read, don't watch

    • @americasimperialist360
      @americasimperialist360 Před 7 lety +3

      ichuisaac123 Spending more than they can afford.

    • @unkown1467
      @unkown1467 Před 5 lety

      Yeah me too

  • @GregoryTheGr8ster
    @GregoryTheGr8ster Před 7 lety +4

    The Japanese people are so fortunate to have a government that actually cares about infrastructure and the public sector. Without these essential services, Japan would rapidly become a 3rd world country, with dirt roads and total anarchy. Government spending creates jobs, stabilizes the economy, and gives people something to believe in.

  • @MarkusAndersen96
    @MarkusAndersen96 Před 9 lety +13

    I'm ashamed to say I didn't understand half of it.
    Econimics... damn

    • @MarkusAndersen96
      @MarkusAndersen96 Před 9 lety

      *****
      econImics truly does, lol =P

    • @ralphwiggum3134
      @ralphwiggum3134 Před 9 lety +3

      The complication is on purpose. It keeps people from getting outraged over being ripped off. Central banks basically run a Ponzi scheme and all countries that are run by them will end up crashing eventually.

  • @benotinsmuller6789
    @benotinsmuller6789 Před 3 lety +1

    Ok why is the debt 23 times Revenue In my calculation its just 6 times. Can somebody help out?

  • @ThePommesSpezial
    @ThePommesSpezial Před 7 lety

    Well done. Simplified, but hit the point. I'm curious about their go-around tacitc.

  • @mahalotoru1
    @mahalotoru1 Před 9 lety +5

    The government debt owned by the government subsidiary is not real debt. The government debt is mostly owned by the Japanese central bank which is a part of the Japanese government. The interest payment directly goes to Treasury Department.

  • @naffeee
    @naffeee Před 8 lety +6

    And as always, the problem is that we spend money we don't have.

    • @m4rs12
      @m4rs12 Před 8 lety

      +Drixeo Interesting indeed. I always thought japanese are very careful with their money (eg. higher savings rate among the population), I guess I was wrong

  • @mbspiele2447
    @mbspiele2447 Před 6 lety

    THIS FFUUUUCKKINGG MUUUUSSIC IS DRIVEN ME INSAAANNNNEEE

  • @mitsubishi777
    @mitsubishi777 Před rokem +2

    TOKYO (Reuters) -- Japan's net external assets hit a record amount in 2021 as the nation retained its position as the top creditor for 31 years in a row.....

  • @The2wanderers
    @The2wanderers Před 8 lety +10

    This seems to complete ignore how this really works. There is literally zero chance of a government defaulting on debt it owes in a currency it controls. As long as bonds are denominated in Yen, they always have the option of monetizing their debts ("printing" enough money to pay bondholders.)
    This has consequences, of course: declining exchange rate and domestic inflation. But if it's true that Japan has been stuck in a deflation spiral, then domestic inflation is desirable. In a deflationary environment, people will put off a purchase because it will be cheaper later...bad for the economy. Higher inflation also increases nominal revenues, making payments on existing debt less onerous.
    Similarly, if your economy is struggling, a declining exchange rate is also desirable, since it makes your exports more competitive. All in all, this is a win-win for Japan.
    Note that if the central bank is targeting a higher inflation level than currently exists, its method of achieving target inflation is to lower interest rates, including those on government bonds. If there isn't enough investor interest to achieve its target, it can use open market operations to buy bonds directly. Either way, interest rates don't go up unless inflation exceeds the target, which this video tells me is a long ways off.
    If the point of the video is that you should avoid buying Japanese government bonds, the point still holds. The effect on an investor's pocketbook is the same whether it's a haircut (partial default, Greek-style) or a declining exchange rate. But if it's trying to convince me that Japan is on an economic precipice because of high government debt...that's just not the case.

    • @LuaanTi
      @LuaanTi Před 8 lety +3

      +Neil Carey You know, "putting off a purchase because it will be cheaper later" used to be known as "saving". It included the awesome capability of being able to fund your own retirement comfortably :) Don't let yourself be fooled - the ones that profit from inflation are the government and the ones closest to the "printed" money (banks, subsidy receivers, ...). Everyone else suffers. It's not a coincidence that governments have always found ideas of people like Keynes and his predecessors very enticing - it gives them more power, at the expense of the people.
      Have you ever seen the computer market? It's one of the most deflationary industries of modern times. And yet, it seems like you do in fact own a computer. How is that possible when you know that you can get a better computer cheaper the next year? How come everyone around you _also_ has a computer, as well as a smart phone... why not just buy them later, when they're going to be cheaper?

    • @lokironin6934
      @lokironin6934 Před 8 lety

      +Luaan I am sorry but you should not be fooled, Luaan. Mr Carey seems to really understand this topic and by your comment I can tell that you have not really expertise when it comes to macroeconomics. The concept Neil was talking about is not "saving" and in no way similar. Saving refers to financing and his point was about consumer price expectations. Further, you cannot compare decreasing microeconomic prices to macroeconomic inflation. I can suggest you some really good economic books in case you want to educate yourself on this topic.
      Btw, I agree with you that inflation is bad for most people, most of the times.

    • @lokironin6934
      @lokironin6934 Před 8 lety

      +Neil Carey thank you. Finally someone.

    • @The2wanderers
      @The2wanderers Před 8 lety

      +Loki Ronin Is inflation bad for most people most of the time? I would posit that high inflation is good for debtors, which in most advanced economies is a sadly large proportion of people. We should all be as lucky as the baby boomers who saw high inflation just after they got their first mortgages, only to see it drop substantially once they entered the high savings part of their lives.

    • @torkilvold3855
      @torkilvold3855 Před 8 lety

      +Neil Carey You're a big keynesian shill!

  • @invertedv12powerhouse77
    @invertedv12powerhouse77 Před 7 lety +22

    So basically they used a strategy that worked only temporary for certain purposes, but they never changed their way of functionning and kept it for who knows how many years and are now completely fucked

    • @dooplon5083
      @dooplon5083 Před 7 lety +2

      Justin sénéchal Basically.

    • @hotfreshrider
      @hotfreshrider Před 7 lety +1

      and that's before you even look at Japans demographics. they're going off on a kamikaze mission of below replacement levels of births because the women are over educated and do not want to start families because they would lose their *independence*. There's also the high cost of living which is counter to starting families. Independent, educated women don't have children. Problem?

    • @invertedv12powerhouse77
      @invertedv12powerhouse77 Před 7 lety +1

      hotfreshrider Starting a family, is to be dependable to each other, I feel like too many people don't know that.

    • @hotfreshrider
      @hotfreshrider Před 7 lety +2

      Justin sénéchal That might be so but in this hyper-individualized world we've created, we don't actually need each other anymore, just money, what you're saying rings hollow. I'd start a family if I could see a point, and that she wouldn't divorce me, take my kids, become a welfare queen while society eggs her on for being independent. 50% of marriages end in divorce, 80% initiated by women. #sexodus #mgtow

    • @invertedv12powerhouse77
      @invertedv12powerhouse77 Před 7 lety +3

      hotfreshrider true

  • @ngcalinqadala2819
    @ngcalinqadala2819 Před 6 lety

    What exactly do you call the study of this, thinking of doing it as a day job cause it's interesting.
    Economics?

  • @the49thline
    @the49thline Před 7 lety +9

    the background music makes it hard to pay attention

  • @tomshackell
    @tomshackell Před 8 lety +7

    In my view, whilst the analysis in this video might feel convincing in some ways, it actually relies on a way of thinking that is now very much outdated. Governments of developed countries that control their own currency do not *need* investors (foreign or otherwise) to buy their debt. The vast majority (over 90%) of new Japanese government debt is now bought by the Bank of Japan (BoJ), not by investors, and the BoJ is completely insensitive to the interest rate it pays for it. The interest rate need never rise due to lack of investor confidence, because the BoJ will always offer to buy the debt at 1% or whatever they set the rate at. If necessary the BoJ will simply buy 100% of all new government debt, investors are not required.
    The Japanese government and the BoJ can keep doing this indefinitely. Additionally since the BoJ is part of the government, really the Japanese government owes all this money to itself. The interest on the debt collected by the BoJ simply goes back into government coffers anyway. Additionally Japan has a balance of trade that is roughly zero, it exports about the same as it imports. So overall this situation seems stable to me, Japan does have a demographic problem but that's not totally unsolvable. Of course, it's very different to how it *used* to work, but the world has changed.

    • @mechoilwcaman2034
      @mechoilwcaman2034 Před 2 lety

      Eh mate, you mind giving this another watch and tell me if all this meant that the citizen lost ~17.5% a pay check and an extra 9% on stuff like groceries? I'm a little confused on it

    • @tomshackell
      @tomshackell Před 2 lety +1

      @@mechoilwcaman2034 I've rewatched the video and I'm not quite sure what you're asking. The video doesn't talk about a 17.5% cut in pay checks, or a 9% increase on the cost of groceries. Perhaps you could rephrase your question?

    • @SoaringSuccubus
      @SoaringSuccubus Před 2 lety +1

      But whenever the BoJ buys, it's new money coming into circulation, right? Whereas if investors bought, it'd be already existing money. So there's a fundamental difference of who funds the dept. Wouldn't MMT (which is what I assume you're advocating) cause inflation?

  • @shaw-krowdashsabe2302
    @shaw-krowdashsabe2302 Před 6 lety +1

    I didn't hear a word you just said the only thing I could pay attention to was the awesome music in the background

  • @natalieaden325
    @natalieaden325 Před 7 lety

    would you please explain the part where interest rate widen, what does it means

  • @Silverstein1883
    @Silverstein1883 Před 10 lety +7

    The proportion of foreign investors in Japan is 8% and around 50% of the holders are government-related organizations such as JP, BOJ, and GPIF who are very unlikely to sell their bonds at anytime for systematic reasons. The rest are owned by domestic Japanese banks etc. This is an exceptional situation amongst other developed countries like US. For example, in US, more than 30% of government bonds are owned by foreign investors, most of which are Japanese and Chinese. But still I think we have to consider the possibility very carefully.

    • @AsterxCo
      @AsterxCo Před 10 lety +1

      I give you a thumbs UP. I'm not sure if what you written is correct, but what you look like is very nice ;)

    • @ggttuuxx
      @ggttuuxx Před 10 lety +1

      JP, GPIF do not own the bonds they hold. They are holding bonds on behalf of retirees who will increasingly be cashing out. It is not what they want to do, it is what they can do. JP & GPIF have fiduciary duty to manage the portfolio to the best interest of the owners, not to freely subsidize an over-spending government.

    • @ssuwandi3240
      @ssuwandi3240 Před rokem

      Absolutely. The strength of Japan Sovereigned Bonds.. the US simply does not cut out now with total $30× TRILLION debts

  • @InayetHadi
    @InayetHadi Před 8 lety +105

    The problem is Interest. It's a satanic invention.

    • @andrius799
      @andrius799 Před 8 lety +24

      +Inayet Hadi Nope

    • @wyw201
      @wyw201 Před 8 lety +54

      +Inayet Hadi You must be joking. If I loan money to you, I need to be paid for the opportunity cost of lending it to you and time. You are not the only person I can lend the money too, you are not special in any way that time has no cost for you.

    • @InayetHadi
      @InayetHadi Před 8 lety +10

      there are many alternative ways to loan money and make a profit without the use of interests. Google, "Islamic Finance" or "Islamic investments" to learn more.

    • @JohnVKaravitis
      @JohnVKaravitis Před 8 lety +62

      +Inayet Hadi "Islamic finance" isn't finance. It's a sham to comply with a comic book that believers in a moon cult don't even read.

    • @wyw201
      @wyw201 Před 8 lety +25

      Inayet Hadi Do you believe money comes from trees, that you can receive free money? Isalmic finance is a pyramid scheme to rob your money away. If you trust them, take all your money from the bank and give it to them.

  • @feruziableszwysikh7389
    @feruziableszwysikh7389 Před 5 lety +1

    Music is good. give that panic feels that it is supposed to do. don't worry.

  • @Ninja-iq2xt
    @Ninja-iq2xt Před 7 lety

    Great Explaination!

  • @BernardCastle
    @BernardCastle Před 6 lety +8

    Debt is 'just delayed taxation'
    -Jacob Rees-Mogg

    • @yoso585
      @yoso585 Před 5 lety

      Ewan Haas
      Or inflation or just not having what one could be having.

  • @CrossStug
    @CrossStug Před 8 měsíci +2

    Video's getting some relevance now.

  • @GnosticSeeker369
    @GnosticSeeker369 Před 7 lety

    background score is sooooo dope!!!

  • @LarsMartinGihle
    @LarsMartinGihle Před 7 lety

    Great video.

  • @multidimensional_holographer

    what is this nonsense? Japan is a creditor nation. It's 'debt' is in Yen, which means it really has no debt.

  • @TheHigherSpace
    @TheHigherSpace Před 6 lety +3

    You basically made it more complicated than it is, with your "visiualisation" .. congratulations.

  • @cal31BRIAN23
    @cal31BRIAN23 Před 7 lety

    I am currently in Japan, in one of the best schools in the country, in a
    MBA program. How do you guys feel this MBA will be received in
    the US?

  • @manengelo8427
    @manengelo8427 Před 7 lety

    yo... this nicca goes with the beat... dis shit fire....

  • @zoomtokyo
    @zoomtokyo Před 10 lety +13

    Whenever there's a debt, there's an equivalent surplus. So how come no one ever examines the fiscal surpluses underpinned by Japan's debt? Probably, because they don't know how the system really works (like the people who made this video).

    • @richrdroma
      @richrdroma Před 10 lety

      A big chunk of it is in pension funds. Unless the government can confiscate the surplus it won't help them. Politically it is easier to devalue the currency.

    • @zoomtokyo
      @zoomtokyo Před 10 lety +5

      richrdroma Yep, pensions, institutions, individuals...the debt service payments are income and revenue in the private sector, which supports consumption that drives the economy. "Devalue the currency"? The yen remains one of the world's strongest and most stable currencies.

    • @richrdroma
      @richrdroma Před 10 lety +3

      Not forever. There's only three options to get out of a big debt like this: inflate, default or austerity. Now which of these three options is the easiest to sell to the public? In fact the selling to the public part has already happened and BOJ are already doing their best to make inflation happen.

    • @zoomtokyo
      @zoomtokyo Před 10 lety

      richrdroma You forgot the best and most common way out: GDP growth. Tax revenue flows in once the economy grows, even just a bit. The US had 114% debt to GDP after WW2. All was paid down easily by higher GDP, not by any of the measures you mention. That's what Japan's stimulus is aimed at doing.

    • @richrdroma
      @richrdroma Před 10 lety +2

      Geoff Botting Yes you are right. With austerity I basically meant spending less than they make. If they increase revenue that will be easier to do. But with Japans demographics this will be tough.