When Consumers Cut Back: A Lesson From Japan

To better compete, companies slashed jobs and wages, replacing much of their work force with temporary workers who had no job security and fewer benefits. Nontraditional workers now make up more than a third of Japan’s labor force.

Younger people are feeling the brunt of that shift. Some 48 percent of workers age 24 or younger are temps. These workers, who came of age during a tough job market, tend to shun conspicuous consumption.

They tend to be uninterested in cars; a survey last year by the business daily Nikkei found that only 25 percent of Japanese men in their 20s wanted a car, down from 48 percent in 2000, contributing to the slump in sales.

Young Japanese women even seem to be losing their once- insatiable thirst for foreign fashion. Louis Vuitton, for example, reported a 10 percent drop in its sales in Japan in 2008.

“I’m not interested in big spending,” says Risa Masaki, 20, a college student in Tokyo and a neighbor of the Takigasakis. “I just want a humble life.”

Japan’s aging population is not helping consumption. Businesses had hoped that baby boomers ”” the generation that reaped the benefits of Japan’s postwar breakneck economic growth ”” would splurge their lifetime savings upon retirement, which began en masse in 2007. But that has not happened at the scale that companies had hoped.

Economists blame this slow spending on widespread distrust of Japan’s pension system, which is buckling under the weight of one of the world’s most rapidly aging societies. That could serve as a warning for the United States, where workers’ 401(k)’s have been ravaged by declining stocks, pensions are disappearing, and the long-term solvency of the Social Security system is in question.

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Posted in * Culture-Watch, * Economics, Politics, * International News & Commentary, Asia, Consumer/consumer spending, Economy, Globalization, Japan, The Credit Freeze Crisis of Fall 2008/The Recession of 2007--

One comment on “When Consumers Cut Back: A Lesson From Japan

  1. Knapsack says:

    Yikes! Did anyone else find themselves baffled by the tone of this article? So if we don’t get right back to over consuming and spending beyond our means, if we recover a sense of the importance of savings and restraint in buying “stuff” of all sorts, we’ve hurt the economy.

    I’m only torn in that i assume the writers are talking to people who know just enough about the economy to say that if we don’t go back to our profligate ways, we’ll see an ongoing economic contraction for a number of years.

    Yep. Except now i guess i have to hope and pray that we hold ourselves back enough to trigger further economic pain . . .