NEWZ063 It’s Dark But It’s Not Over

Moscow Riots — Hamburg Asylum Seekers — Telangana State Protests — US Gov Shutdown — Unified Cuban Currency — Japanese Despise Sex — Worldviews Blog

We kickoff this week's newz rundown with the latest on the Moscow riots. Which reminds us of the issue of asylum seekers in Germany and throughout Europe as more tragedies take place at sea. There's a new state in India, now over two months old, it is still inspiring protests. The US government was shut down, but now it is opened again- for now. Cuba has announced an end to the 19 year old convertible peso, next up- a unified currency. Latest graphs and charts on Japan's problematic apathy towards sex, relationships and kids. This week's newz source: The Worldviews Blog published as part of the Washington Post.

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Mark Fonseca Rendeiro
Amsterdam, Netherlands
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Tim Pritlove
Berlin, Germany

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8 thoughts on “NEWZ063 It’s Dark But It’s Not Over

  1. Event though applied social sciences is not my specialities in regards to Japan but more the political and economical side, I have to comment on some of the statements made about Japan ;)

    1) Japan is crowded and it is not bad if the population gets reduced.
    The problem is that with a decreasing population your work force decreases. Since the pension system is a pay-as-you-go-system you have a real problem in financing the pensions. Especially with the baby boomers leaving the work force soon. The increase in total factor productivity is just not high enough to finance these pensions when the labor force continues to decrease. Yes it is crowded (120 million people in a country with the size of Germany but inhabitable is only a third of it). But at least the pension system just can’t afford it (and I am still wondering what happens to China in regards to that). There are discussions to invite more immigrants to counter the demographic change or to find a way that women get faster back into the labor force again (or do not leave it in the first place).

    2) For sex they are going usually into love hotels because you are living usually in one room and the walls are thin.
    a) Young people tend to go to love hotels because walls are thin and well you don’t want that your parents could hear you. In addition it is still not really socially acceptable that a boy and a girl are together at home in one room. A boy meeting a girl alone already means that they usually have to have a date.
    Or you have parents who want to have some time together, people with affairs, prostitution (even though that one is kinda forbidden) etc. Love hotels have themed rooms which you won’t get in a normal hotel.
    b) People do not always live together in one room. Normal apartments have several rooms and a lot of people even have a house with two levels. The rooms are usually smaller but that is balanced out with practical furniture (closets in the wall, the futon which you can put away into the closet when you are not sleeping etc. – but beds are becoming more popular)
    Anecdote: When I lived in Japan I didn’t know a lot of people with only one room – and they usually lived alone, didn’t have a lot of money or lived in very very expensive areas. Oh wait, the same accounts for people in Germany with one-room-apartments. In my case I lived with a Japanese family (mother, daughter, grandmother, another foreigner and me). The grandmother, the other foreigner and me had all our own rooms. The mother and the daughter slept in the living/dining room. Since we all used futon, you didn’t see on the day anything that the living/dining room was used for sleeping. Rooms were all small but not uncomfortable. And don’t forget that you can always go up in terms of height of buildings even in countries with a lot of earthquakes.

    3) Maid bars are aimed at business men.
    Ehm, no. Usually they are aimed at Otakus, nerds. Yes, there are otakus who are also business men, but the target group are more or less nerds.
    Targeted at business men are hostess clubs. There you pay a lot of money to talk with a pretty looking woman which lets you feel that you are the king (and they usually do not serve to foreigners…I knew someone who was a waiter in such a club, so I got some anecdotal evidence about that). But foreigners usually wouldn’t probably also do not pay for that service. You pay around $100 per hour to talk with a woman plus drinks etc. Only in the cheap clubs you might have a chance to go with a woman to a love hotel after the club is closed if you pay extra (don’t forget prostitution is forbidden in Japan…but there are also loop holes).

    4) You never get an apartment with room mates
    Yes and no. It is not as common as here but it is getting more common. I even knew someone who lived with a roommate together in a one-room-apartment.
    But there are guest houses in bigger cities which essentially work like living in an apartment with roommates. Everyone has his/her own room. There are usually shared bath rooms and maybe shared kitchens.

    5) You live at home or alone
    Problem 1) Having an own apartment is really expensive. You pay 3 months of rent as kind of a gift to the land lord and there is an additional 3 months deposit. Thus you do not leave home if it is not necessary (my favorite phenomenon in that regard are the parasite singles). Btw. this is different with guest houses. There is the “gift” not involved and the deposit is far lower.
    Problem 2) As a couple you do not live together before you didn’t marry because it is socially not acceptable. So again a problem there with leaving home (oh and getting children; btw. abortions are in Japan afaik more “popular” as in the US or in Europe. Iirc one reason is that there is no Christian background to condemn it and Shinto and Buddhism both don’t really condemn it iirc. But this is something from far deep in the back of my head I wouldn’t swear on.)

    In addition besides of students or people who studied (or expats) I actually did not yet learn so many people to know here as well who share an apartment. Even with students it seems to decrease in Germany and people seem to tend to live longer at home since the change to a Bachelor/Master-system here. And the Japanese I learned to know here who are doing working holidays
    are often sharing an apartment with others ;)

    5) There was something in the podcast also about women and the labor force in Japan but I just can’t find it right now.
    Women usually are expected to leave the labor force when they are getting children. It is even getting so far that when people are marrying that the company will try to convince the woman to leave the company because she has now to take care of the household and has to get babies. Women who do not want that do not marry and it is hard for women to marry after 30. In the past there was this great metaphor for the christmas cake (which you eat on christmas which is there more like a party with friends and new years eve is the family thing) which gets bad after the 25th of December. Meaning that women have problems finding a men when they are than 25. Nowadays you talk about the New Years cake (which gets bad after the 31st).
    In addition things like kindergardens have usually chronically bad opening times for people who work. And since flexible time programs are usually not existent (and which would solve also this overcrowded train-problem in the rush hour), you just can’t combine work/career and children. Thus you see an M-curve in the labor participation rate by age. Which brings me back to the problem with the demographic problem. Women usually return to the labor force after their children grew up only as part-timers. Henceforth they can’t bring in a full wage into the social system.

    But I think that is enough before I get lost in my trail of thoughts. I hope that clarified some things about Japan. And I really have to read up again on some of the stuff before I go into my final examinations :/

  2. Pingback: Some comments about Japan and the latest Newz of the World | Niels K.

  3. Hey Niels thanks for taking the time to write all that and for the detailed answers to fill in info that we were missing on many levels. What oh what will happen to Japan.. ah and China.. an even bigger question for the future.

  4. I have to give you this nice saying from my airbnb host in Lisbon:

    “Germans are humans that try to act like machines.
    Japanese are machines that try to act like humans.”

    – kind of fits here ;-)

  5. Dear Mark and Tim,

    I recently discovered your podcast and love it (it is the kind of __relevant__ news summary that I couldn’t find anywhere else). However the “Japanese are having less and less sex” part makes me pause. The recent wave of articles on the topic are backed up by cherry-picking results from “surveys”, some of which have little scientific grounding to begin with, highlightning edge cases (the geek community, the expat community), and questionable sources (anecdotal evidence, some guy blogging about Japan). This is not even “worth to think about, even though some of the data might be incorrect” – it is just plain wrong, period. These articles pop up every couple of years, presumably because it’s fun to read about “crazy Japan”.

    I realize it might be hard to look at all news with a fresh, critical eye, especially if a lot of people are talking about it in a “yes, indeed” mode. But the above signs were there. I’m sure had you read an article about, say, hacker culture, where it looked like the reporter went into the nearest hackerspace, grabbed a couple of people whose ideas were the most “out there”, and then made it seem like they’re speaking for the whole community, you would’ve had a closer look before quoting it. Then why not here?

    This makes me wonder if you might approach other not-close-to-home topics with the same uncritical spirit, and frankly this is a damn shame. I’ll continue tuning in and hope for the best, as at some point you’re bound to report on Russia (another society I know well).

    • Heya Reni– so there is no single bit of truth or reflection of reality in stories about how sex is seen in Japan? I know what you mean by stories getting exaggerated and I know it happens all the time and I’m not immune to that kind of thing. But to say it is completely wrong, thats a very final judgement on what I have seen is a question worthy of more exploration. Sure its not the only country where this is a good question. Ive been trying to figure out the American approach to sex for decades because it is so schizophrenic.

      Im honored you like the program. Im quite sure we suck or get it wrong with our off the cuff opinions and musings much of the time. But I do enjoy doing it.

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