Abenomics (aka akphidelt-onomics) close to perfect in Japan! What a shocker.

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Dodd Frank has as much to do with the lack of growth as anything.

Yep, Dodd-Frank, Obamacare, EPA, Cass Sunstein behind the scenes, list goes on and on..

The community organizer killed the golden goose and the next president is going to have a hell of a mess to clean up.
 

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Yep, Dodd-Frank, Obamacare, EPA, Cass Sunstein behind the scenes, list goes on and on..

The community organizer killed the golden goose and the next president is going to have a hell of a mess to clean up.
:laugh: Feel the Bern.
 

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Japan’s elderly turn to life of crime to ease cost of living

Japan's prison system is being driven to budgetary crisis by demographics, a welfare shortfall and a new, pernicious breed of villain: the recidivist retiree. And the silver-haired crooks, say academics, are desperate to be behind bars.

Crime figures show that about 35 per cent of shoplifting offences are committed by people over 60. Within that age bracket, 40 per cent of repeat offenders have committed the same crime more than six times.

There is good reason, concludes a report, to suspect that the shoplifting crime wave in particular represents an attempt by those convicted to end up in prison — an institution that offers free food, accommodation and healthcare.

The mathematics of recidivism are gloomily compelling for the would-be convict. Even with a frugal diet and dirt-cheap accommodation, a single Japanese retiree with minimal savings has living costs more than 25 per cent higher than the meagre basic state pension of Y780,000 ($6,900) a year, according to a study on the economics of elderly crime by Michael Newman of Tokyo-based research house Custom Products Research.
Even the theft of a Y200 sandwich can earn a two-year prison sentence, say academics, at an Y8.4m cost to the state.

The geriatric crime wave is accelerating, and analysts note that the Japanese prison system — newly expanded and at about 70 per cent occupancy — is being prepared for decades of increases. Between 1991 and 2013, the latest year for which the Ministry of Justice publishes figures, the number of elderly inmates in jail for repeating the same offence six times has climbed 460 per cent.

The surging rates of crime among the elderly disguise a darker trend than mere contempt for the law, say economists and criminologists. Retiree crime is rising more quickly than the general demographic ascent into old age that will put 40 per cent of the Japanese population over 65 by the year 2060.

http://www.cnbc.com/2016/03/27/japans-elderly-turn-to-life-of-crime-to-ease-cost-of-living.html

face)(*^%
 

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Akio Doteuchi, a senior researcher on social development at the NLI Research Institute in Tokyo, expects the ratio of repeat offenders to continue rising.

"The social situation in Japan has forced the elderly into the need to commit crime," he says. "The ratio of people who receive public assistance is highest since the end of the war. About 40 per cent of the elderly live alone. It's a vicious circle. They leave prison, they don't have money or family so they turn immediately to crime."

The crime figures, he adds, expose the strained calculus of the government's welfare spending as the world's second-biggest economy ages. Prison, no matter how the spreadsheets are run, is a woefully inefficient way for the government to target welfare spending at those who most need it.

Attempts to find ways to release elderly prisoners early have encountered insurmountable legal problems, Mr Doteuchi says, and the prison system as a whole will eventually be overrun by elderly inmates.

keynesian-sharks.jpg



 

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:):)

Th fucking simpleton who started this thread would terrify the world if he asserted the sun is coming up tomorrow:

[h=1]Olivier Blanchard eyes ugly 'end game' for Japan on debt spiral[/h]

I have never in my life seen people such as this who are wrong about literally everything.
 

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Abenomics’ failure and the curse of ‘Japanization’

Pesek realized from the outset that Abenomics is a hustle, more about politics than economic revival.

http://www.japantimes.co.jp/opinion...mics-failure-curse-japanization/#.V8sZUZgrKhc

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But, but, but...

My Puget Sound college prof told me Abenomics is perfect in Japan! How can this be??????

Right Way Willie's time doing its thing again!

:):)
 

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Abenomics’ failure and the curse of ‘Japanization’

Pesek realized from the outset that Abenomics is a hustle, more about politics than economic revival.

http://www.japantimes.co.jp/opinion...mics-failure-curse-japanization/#.V8sZUZgrKhc

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

But, but, but...

My Puget Sound college prof told me Abenomics is perfect in Japan! How can this be??????

Right Way Willie's time doing its thing again!

:):)
It's kind of nice to have fresh road kill to mock. The others here have been pretty much picked clean.
 

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No matter what Japan does they can't create the inflation that conservatives said would happen. They defied every conservative economic ideology!! Just a wonderful example of evolution of economic education. Thanks for brining this back up Dave!
 

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No matter what Japan does they can't create the inflation that conservatives said would happen. They defied every conservative economic ideology!! Just a wonderful example of evolution of economic education. Thanks for brining this back up Dave!

Yeah, kinda hard to have inflation with such anemic growth. face)(*^%

Nobody, I mean nobody, has been more horribly wrong on issue after issue than you have.

No wonder voodoo vitard begged you to come back! LMFAO!

"I'm very, VERY educated!" - fratfraud

Right Way Willie's time doing its thing again.
 

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No matter what Japan does they can't create the inflation that conservatives said would happen. They defied every conservative economic ideology!! Just a wonderful example of evolution of economic education. Thanks for brining this back up Dave!
I didn't bring back anything. I see you still can't read. Just jumped on the pile.


Maybe this time around things will be better for you and you won't have to back into rehab.
 
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No matter what Japan does they can't create the inflation that conservatives said would happen. They defied every conservative economic ideology!! Just a wonderful example of evolution of economic education. Thanks for brining this back up Dave!


Pavian. You'd gain some respect if you'd just admit when you're wrong.
 

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I can see these people are just as dumb as before, lol. Poor guys always wrong. Abenomics destroys every belief conservatives have. And the good news is their standard of living has increased higher than the EU austerity nutters. Problem is no matter how much they spend, they'll still can't generate inflation. Why is that? You have to be smart to figure it out. Trust me, you guys have no clue, lol.
 

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Where's the inflation Joe? They're at 200+% debt to GDP. Why aren't they like the Weimar Republic you guys love so much, lol. Tell me where's the hyperinflation Joe!!
 

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I can see these people are just as dumb as before, lol. Poor guys always wrong. Abenomics destroys every belief conservatives have. And the good news is their standard of living has increased higher than the EU austerity nutters. Problem is no matter how much they spend, they'll still can't generate inflation. Why is that? You have to be smart to figure it out. Trust me, you guys have no clue, lol.

They have always been clueless no reason to change now. But if you admit you're wrong you'll get respect from 6-8 total losers in life. I swear these right wingers are at least partially retarded.
 

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d6c434e39833d59b387119bcd46ffa37.jpg


Japan’s Savings Rate Turns Negative in Challenge for Abe

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2014-12-26/japan-s-real-wages-decline-most-since-2009-in-challenge-for-abe
 

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Where's the inflation Joe? Lmao. That's what you guys always complain about when talking about government debt. Where's the inflation Joe?
 

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"Inflation" LOL...strawmen are fun!

I just don't know who to believe anymore - Puget Sound professors, or the IMF!

==============================================================================

The IMF Tells Japan: Abenomics Is A Miserable Failure, Recommends "Forcing Companies To Raise Wages.. Or Else!"



by Tyler Durden
Jun 20, 2016 9:40 PM


For those confused as to whether or not Abenomics was working, all one has to do is glance at the recent export data released by the Ministry of Finance for confirmation that it's been a complete disaster.

Japan's exports fell 11.3% in May on a y/y basis, the eighth consecutive month that exports have fallen according to Bloomberg. Exports to the US fell 10.7% from a year earlier, and exports to China, Japan's largest trading partner plummeted 14.9% y/y.



However, do not be alarmed, as the IMF is all over the matter.
In a statement released on Monday, the IMF had a lot of sage advice to provide Prime Minister Abe about his Abenomics policies that have failed to produce literally any of the intended results.


As the Nikkei Asian Review summarizes, the IMF said that "Abenomics needs to be reloaded", arguing that income policies and labor market reforms should be moved to the forefront. What stands out immediately here, is that the IMF is advocating a policy whereby companies are made to raise wages by at least 3%, and if they fail to do so, penalties are imposed. If central planning hadn't jumped the shark a long time ago, we'd submit that this would be that point.


From the Nikkei Asian Review

Despite initial success, progress under Abenomics, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's trademark economic policies, has stalled in recent months. The inflation rate has dropped to negative territory again, while economic growth has remained anemic.The IMF now expects Japan's economy to grow by about 0.5 percent in 2016, before slowing to 0.3 percent in 2017, with potential growth sliding to close to zero by 2030, due to the declining demographic.

"Abenomics needs to be reloaded," the IMF said in its report and argued that income policies combined with labor market reforms should "move to the forefront" of the country's fight against lagging growth.

"The government can introduce a 'comply or explain' mechanism for profitable companies to ensure that they raise base wages by at least 3% and back this up by stronger tax incentives or -- as a last resort -- penalties," the IMF wrote. Promoting intermediate contracts that balance job security and wage increases will "reinforce income policies," it added.

"Our perception is that much of the stasis of inflation [in Japan] comes from the legacy, the history of having negative inflation," said David Lipton, first deputy managing director at the IMF, in a press conference in Tokyo. "Certainly firms have at this point the cash flow and resource at hand to provide some wage increases. There are wage increases evident in a wide range of companies across this economy, so our thought is to suggest that this be a broader practice and that it be more uniform."

Upon learning of the news that Abe delayed Japan's long awaited tax hike, we pointed out that it was an admission of failure for Abenomics, and Japan had no hope of ever reducing its debt load. The IMF is now pushing Japan to not only put the tax hikes back on the table, but incresae the percentage to "at least 15%." as part of a "credible fiscal plan." - good luck with all of that.

The fund noted that these reforms need to be backed up by measures to support demand as well as credible fiscal plans, and argued that the consumption tax hike to 10%, which the government delayed until October 2019, should be replaced by a gradual increase towards "at least 15%."

"Starting the increases soon and replacing the currently planned 2019 hike with such a pre-announced, gradual path would enhance the credibility of the long-run fiscal adjustment, reduce uncertainty for consumers and avoid large intertemporal shifts in spending around the time of the tax hikes," the IMF said.

The IMF even admits that NIRP has failed to generate any domestic demand at all, and is calling for the BOJ to scrap any expectation of inflation in order to be more realistic.

The Bank of Japan in February introduced a negative interest rate in part to support domestic demand. However, in the event that the IMF's suggestions will not be implemented, Japan will lack growth and therefore would need a longer time to get its fiscal books in order. In that scenario, the IMF called on the bank to scrap its time frame for achieving its 2% inflation target, which the BOJ now sets at somewhere in fiscal 2017.

"The monetary policy framework would need to become more flexible, with the BOJ abandoning the use of a specific calendar date for achieving its inflation target," the IMF said. "While such a shift should raise BOJ credibility by setting a more realistic goal, the transition will need to be well-communicated to avoid perceptions that the BOJ is reducing its commitment to achieving its inflation target and to limit the potential for adverse market reactions, including yen appreciation."
* * *
So in summary, the IMF has studied Japan's economy and has come to the conclusion that Abenomics has been a miserable failure. The advice now is to scrap all of the plans for hitting any kind of economic targets, and just start forcing companies to raise wages, while simultaneously raising everyone's taxes 15%. The central planners are literally starting to lose their collective minds.

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Negative interest rates.

Horrible growth.

Plummeting savings.

Plummeting exports.

Good ol' Pavian economics...some things never change.

 

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They have always been clueless no reason to change now. But if you admit you're wrong you'll get respect from 6-8 total losers in life. I swear these right wingers are at least partially retarded.

I miss them. They're so entertaining!! I mean like zoo animals, just fun to watch in their environments. These guys have been wrong about everything regarding economics and they still believe the same shit, lol. If people listened to these nutters like festeringRetard and his best buddy Joe, they'd be broke right now. Wrong about everything. I however have been correct on almost every single one of my economic predictions. Not bragging though. Just want others to know.
 

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The IMF? Lmao, the same group that said Europe needs austerity then came to the conclusion austerity is far worse than they imagined. Yea, I said it would be a disaster before they tried it. You'd be really smart if you listened to me.
 

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