China Rises Fast as Japan Loses Strength

Japan is now confronting one of the most dangerous economic moments in its modern history. A currency under pressure, a towering public debt load, and rising geopolitical risk are colliding. At the same time that China’s financial influence is expanding, and the global order is slowly shifting. In the decades after World War II, Japan was often held up as a model of stability, a disciplined society, worldclass manufacturers, and a central bank that seemed to manage deflation and aging with technocratic calm. For years, that image looked accurate from the outside. But what looked like stability was also a kind of frozen equilibrium built on conditions that could not last forever. Japan’s model depended on ultra- low interest rates, very low inflation, and a global trading system that let it import energy and raw materials cheaply while exporting high value industrial goods around the world. That combination allowed Tokyo to carry far more public debt than any other major advanced economy without triggering a crisis. Today that debt stands at roughly 2435 240% of GDP, the highest among major developed countries. For a long time, markets accepted this as an exception. They were willing to live with. Japan’s own investors held most of the debt. Inflation was muted and the yen was seen as a safe haven. But once global conditions changed, particularly after 2020, the weaknesses underneath that equilibrium became harder to ignore. The yen has fallen sharply against the US dollar over the past two years. At one point, losing around 10% of its value in a single year as the interest rate gap between the United States and Japan widened. A weaker yen makes Japanese exports more competitive, but it also makes imports, especially energy, much more expensive in local currency terms. For an economy that imports nearly all of its oil, gas, and coal, that is an immediate squeeze on households and industry. At the same time, Japan’s central bank has been boxed in by the very debt strategy that helped buy time in the past. The more debt the government issues, the more sensitive the system becomes to higher interest rates. If rates rise meaningfully, the cost of servicing that debt balloons, threatening the government’s budget, heavily indebted firms and households that grew used to cheap credit. That is why, even as other central banks were lifting interest rates to fight inflation, the Bank of Japan kept its policy rate around zero and used yield curve control to cap longerterm borrowing costs. Analysts described this as a kind of fiscal trap. The state must suppress yields to stay solvent. But suppressing yields puts pressure on the currency.

China Rises Fast as Japan Loses Strength

Japan faces a dangerous turning point as a weak yen, record debt and rising geopolitical risks collide with China’s growing financial power. This video explains how ultra-low interest rates, massive public borrowing and dependence on Chinese supply chains created a fiscal trap, why rare earths and tourism give Beijing leverage, and how a shifting, multipolar financial order is reshaping Japan’s options in the coming years, for markets, workers and families.

#CrossWorldNews #Japan #China #GlobalPower #Yen #XiJinping #SanaeTakaichi #BreakingNews

41 Comments

  1. EVEN some Japanese members of parliament consider their country "occupied" by the USA. They expressed their feelings to the Japanese female PM. They told her that the reason Russia did NOT gave back some former Japanese islandswhich were lost after WW2 is because the USA was planning to put bases on those islands.

  2. For China, it’s very hard to deal with Japan, because it’s not really a sovereign country. Simply put, it’s a puppet of the United States. When Mr. Trump chose strategic retrenchment and to focus on domestic issues, Japan felt a sense of crisis. So it tried to find ways to keep the U.S. present: it chose to provoke China so that America would keep its strategic focus on East Asia.

    From China’s perspective, that makes it really hard to maintain truly equal diplomatic relations with Japan (because Japan’s future choices have never really been in its own hands, lol).As I said, how are you supposed to deal with a puppet?

  3. May be they should ask China’s Ai for a solution.
    Making war never ends well. Japan is a child of the US. Bit the US is heavily dependent on Japan to continue to buy US debt. Of I were Japan I would sell those US bonds to au off the debt down to say 10% of gdp and get rid of the US connections in the politique. They serve US interests before serving Japans. I would also make peace with China quickly recognise China’s right over Formosa and sign a non agression treaty with China. Japan needs China more than ever and it needs China more than the US.

  4. Spti nya Parlemen Jepang tdk selektif dlm memilih pm nya, shga tdk paham sejarah perang kedua, shga buat pernyataan yg blunder/ krn baru cari sensasi tapi sangat beresiko terkesan bodoh serta di pecundang tram orng picik licik provokasi stlh negara tsb persng mka as jualan senjata & berdiam diri !!! Herannya Jepang yg dianggap cerdas kok mau ikut skenario tram !!! As ekonomi nya sedang tdk baik yg pastinya sgla cara kotor mereka lakukan, hutang sdh lebih tingi dri gng – terbukti ketika tram perang tarip tetap sja sekutu2 nya di kenai tarip tinggi !!! Bgtu bodoh nya sekutu2 as !!!

  5. Where is the western world in support of an ally? To busy dealing with morons protesting over absolute rubbish in the streets.

    What a time to not be born Chinese… the west is on the downfall

  6. One would think Japan being Asian would naturally side with China but no, it prefers the West. And this plays well into the hands of the West. They think “ Ah, here is a county willing to volunteer itself to be our troublemaker. Let us rest while she destroys herself fighting our enemy”.

  7. Japan's living standard is much higher than that of China (2025). I guess it takes another 40 years to equal that when everyone in Japan are senior citizen, lol

  8. Japanese have become lazy, their PM only sleeps 2 hrs and she only work and work , So all other Japanese should also do same as her ✅
    Best PM who will make It compulsory for Japanese to work 13 Hrs a Day