open.spotify.com/episode/1nZ1ibt0MDYI1EziO1YVT4
Preview meta tags from the open.spotify.com website.
Linked Hostnames
1Thumbnail
Search Engine Appearance
Why Capitalism Stopped Working In Japan, with Takeo Hoshi
Listen to this episode from Capitalisn't on Spotify. The Japanese economy was once the envy of the world. By the 1980s, it looked set to surpass the United States in size. Real estate prices were high, the stock market was booming—the entire world was asking if Japan had found a superior model of economic growth and recovery after World War II, one grounded in industrial policy.However, the bubble burst in the early 1990s, and what followed was not a quick recession and rebound as we have often seen in the U.S., but decades of stagnation. Near-zero deflation became entrenched, and the banking system turned into a drug of cheap borrowing rather than an engine for recovery, with the Bank of Japan pioneering quantitative easing by pushing interest rates to zero long before the U.S. Federal Reserve considered such steps in the wake of the 2007 financial crisis. Japan has never since returned to sustainable growth, and this matters for the world at large. A significant creditor to other countries, shifts in Japan’s economic policy and fluctuations in its currency ripple across global interest rates, tightening or loosening financial conditions worldwide. Japan also remains a critical node in global supply chains (including for semiconductor chips and electronics), a major importer of energy, and not for nothing, its cultural exports continue to conquer the world.What lessons can Japan’s lost decades of economic stagnation and missed opportunities offer the U.S. and other developed economies? Bethany and Luigi are joined by Takeo Hoshi, professor of economics at the University of Tokyo and a leading expert on Japan's financial system and economic stagnation. Together, they discuss Japan’s idiosyncrasies—from demographic decline to economic policy mismanagement—and the interplay of global factors such as populism, nativism, and dissatisfaction with capitalism. If the U.S. is indeed on the cusp of its own economic bubble driven by oversized capital investments in artificial intelligence and technology rather than consumer spending and wage growth, does it have the institutions and flexibility to avoid Japan’s fate? Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Bing
Why Capitalism Stopped Working In Japan, with Takeo Hoshi
Listen to this episode from Capitalisn't on Spotify. The Japanese economy was once the envy of the world. By the 1980s, it looked set to surpass the United States in size. Real estate prices were high, the stock market was booming—the entire world was asking if Japan had found a superior model of economic growth and recovery after World War II, one grounded in industrial policy.However, the bubble burst in the early 1990s, and what followed was not a quick recession and rebound as we have often seen in the U.S., but decades of stagnation. Near-zero deflation became entrenched, and the banking system turned into a drug of cheap borrowing rather than an engine for recovery, with the Bank of Japan pioneering quantitative easing by pushing interest rates to zero long before the U.S. Federal Reserve considered such steps in the wake of the 2007 financial crisis. Japan has never since returned to sustainable growth, and this matters for the world at large. A significant creditor to other countries, shifts in Japan’s economic policy and fluctuations in its currency ripple across global interest rates, tightening or loosening financial conditions worldwide. Japan also remains a critical node in global supply chains (including for semiconductor chips and electronics), a major importer of energy, and not for nothing, its cultural exports continue to conquer the world.What lessons can Japan’s lost decades of economic stagnation and missed opportunities offer the U.S. and other developed economies? Bethany and Luigi are joined by Takeo Hoshi, professor of economics at the University of Tokyo and a leading expert on Japan's financial system and economic stagnation. Together, they discuss Japan’s idiosyncrasies—from demographic decline to economic policy mismanagement—and the interplay of global factors such as populism, nativism, and dissatisfaction with capitalism. If the U.S. is indeed on the cusp of its own economic bubble driven by oversized capital investments in artificial intelligence and technology rather than consumer spending and wage growth, does it have the institutions and flexibility to avoid Japan’s fate? Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
DuckDuckGo
Why Capitalism Stopped Working In Japan, with Takeo Hoshi
Listen to this episode from Capitalisn't on Spotify. The Japanese economy was once the envy of the world. By the 1980s, it looked set to surpass the United States in size. Real estate prices were high, the stock market was booming—the entire world was asking if Japan had found a superior model of economic growth and recovery after World War II, one grounded in industrial policy.However, the bubble burst in the early 1990s, and what followed was not a quick recession and rebound as we have often seen in the U.S., but decades of stagnation. Near-zero deflation became entrenched, and the banking system turned into a drug of cheap borrowing rather than an engine for recovery, with the Bank of Japan pioneering quantitative easing by pushing interest rates to zero long before the U.S. Federal Reserve considered such steps in the wake of the 2007 financial crisis. Japan has never since returned to sustainable growth, and this matters for the world at large. A significant creditor to other countries, shifts in Japan’s economic policy and fluctuations in its currency ripple across global interest rates, tightening or loosening financial conditions worldwide. Japan also remains a critical node in global supply chains (including for semiconductor chips and electronics), a major importer of energy, and not for nothing, its cultural exports continue to conquer the world.What lessons can Japan’s lost decades of economic stagnation and missed opportunities offer the U.S. and other developed economies? Bethany and Luigi are joined by Takeo Hoshi, professor of economics at the University of Tokyo and a leading expert on Japan's financial system and economic stagnation. Together, they discuss Japan’s idiosyncrasies—from demographic decline to economic policy mismanagement—and the interplay of global factors such as populism, nativism, and dissatisfaction with capitalism. If the U.S. is indeed on the cusp of its own economic bubble driven by oversized capital investments in artificial intelligence and technology rather than consumer spending and wage growth, does it have the institutions and flexibility to avoid Japan’s fate? Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
General Meta Tags
15- titleWhy Capitalism Stopped Working In Japan, with Takeo Hoshi - Capitalisn't | Podcast on Spotify
- charsetutf-8
- X-UA-CompatibleIE=9
- viewportwidth=device-width, initial-scale=1
- fb:app_id174829003346
Open Graph Meta Tags
178- og:site_nameSpotify
- og:titleWhy Capitalism Stopped Working In Japan, with Takeo Hoshi
- og:descriptionCapitalisn't · Episode
- og:urlhttps://open.spotify.com/episode/1nZ1ibt0MDYI1EziO1YVT4
- og:typemusic.song
Twitter Meta Tags
5- twitter:site@spotify
- twitter:titleWhy Capitalism Stopped Working In Japan, with Takeo Hoshi
- twitter:descriptionCapitalisn't · Episode
- twitter:imagehttps://i.scdn.co/image/ab6765630000ba8a7ac8b70dd50a707ca2b7b65b
- twitter:cardsummary
Link Tags
31- alternatehttps://open.spotify.com/oembed?url=https%3A%2F%2Fopen.spotify.com%2Fepisode%2F1nZ1ibt0MDYI1EziO1YVT4
- alternateandroid-app://com.spotify.music/spotify/episode/1nZ1ibt0MDYI1EziO1YVT4
- canonicalhttps://open.spotify.com/episode/1nZ1ibt0MDYI1EziO1YVT4
- iconhttps://open.spotifycdn.com/cdn/images/favicon32.b64ecc03.png
- iconhttps://open.spotifycdn.com/cdn/images/favicon16.1c487bff.png
Website Locales
2en
https://open.spotify.com/episode/1nZ1ibt0MDYI1EziO1YVT4x-default
https://open.spotify.com/episode/1nZ1ibt0MDYI1EziO1YVT4
Links
9- https://open.spotify.com
- https://open.spotify.com/episode/2X9yg92iwLRHHSzlCGQVQy
- https://open.spotify.com/episode/3zyhvOw2mXTv8C4BQ2MHd4
- https://open.spotify.com/episode/41bwbBkW0iBuOY64xoLkTe
- https://open.spotify.com/episode/513CkgWiimefDpgNeDSLHz