Showing posts with label Economy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Economy. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Emperor's Cherry Blossoms (天皇の桜, てんのうのさくら, tennou no sakura)

Chidori ga Fuchi:




If you couldn't guess from the title, these cherry blossoms are all near the Emperor's Palace in Tokyo.  Mainly located in the northern area of the palace, many cherry blossom trees line the moat that surrounds this area.  As you could imagine for this area, the views during hanami are simply breathtaking as the paths and banks are covered in the light pink and white blossoms of the many trees in the area.  We went here on April 10th this year.

Leading up to Kitanomaru Park, which has the Budokan (the national martial arts hall).

Looking over the embankments on the Imperial Palace side.

Our simple hanami.
Lunch with a view.

The gate heading back out across the moat.

There was a place to rent boats to go around the moat, but the line like most popular things in Tokyo was incredibly long.  Maybe next year.


Starting our way around the moat.






The Budokan: Was made for the Judo arena during Japan's 1964 Olympics.  Besides martial arts, it is famous for hosting music concerts, most notably the Beatles' first concerts in Japan. [1]  


In the last entry, I explained a little about the importance of the cherry blossom in Japan's culture.  Maybe this next picture will look similar to the one above it.

Japan's 100 yen coin.  Worth about $1.20 now, but think of it as a Japan dollar bill equivalent.
One of the main coins uses the image of the sakura flower.  Japan uses coins only for 1, 5, 10, 50, 100 and 500 yen.  Being close to a dollar value, it is one of the most commonly used currency in Japan.  The portrait of Washington on the dollar bill getting replaced with cherry blossoms in Japan should give an idea of the cultural value the cherry blossom holds.

The end of the Sakura season brings the prettiest sight of the season, but also one with a twinge of sadness, as it marks the end of the cherry blossoms for that year.

桜吹雪: Cherry Blossom Blizzard (さくらふぶき, sakura fubuki)

Towards the end of the season, the trees start to lose a lot of their petals at once, especially when a breeze comes by.  All of the petals dropping makes the area look like it's snowing, even though it is just the cherry blossom petals.  It is by far the prettiest part of the cherry blossom season, but also bittersweet; for once they fall off the tree, that is it for the sakura until next year.


This transition from the blooming process, to full bloom and the final beauty of the sakura fubuki before disappearing for the year also has a significant cultural symbolism in Japan.  The great beauty of the cherry blossoms, tempered by its fragility and short blooming period of only a few weeks carries the symbolism of human's own mortality in Japan.  Drawing from Buddhism and early Japanese culture, this feeling of creating a bright beauty in the short time of life and then its bittersweet passing is a common motif in Japan culture and literature.  It never takes a stronger meaning than the cherry blossom season every spring.  While we would have gone to more places,  the cherry blossoms had all disappeared by the time the next weekend came.  This year it lasted from the end of March till early in April.  I'll have to wait for next spring to catch another glimpse of their brilliance here.

References:

1. Duncan, Bartlett, "Japan Keeps Lennon's Memory Alive," BBC.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/7770865.stm.

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Tōhoku Earthquake Part 2 (東北の地震パート2)

For Tokyo, the after effects had much more of an impact than the earthquake itself.  The first couple of weeks afterwards showed me a lot about herd mentality and the fragility of large cities.  Tokyo, with all of its size, population and power in Japan came to a standstill the week afterwards.  Even though it was far from the earthquake and had negligable damage.  However, any large metropolis would probably experience similar problems.  While cities are the powerful centers of any place, there's also a fragility that gets forgotten until something like this happens.  Cities constantly need an influx of supplies to keep it running as it can't support itself nor has the space to produce its own needs.  If the supply chain was to ever be cut off, then...

For a few days this was the scene in every grocery store, convenient store and hyaku yen (dollar store) in Tokyo.
What happened to Tokyo was multiple logistic failures at once.  The first being the destruction caused by the earthquake and tsunami in the north and along the eastern coast of Japan.  It destroyed some of the production centers of goods.  The longest effects were egg factories and milk containers which caused both products to be off the shelves for a few weeks.  However, damage to other areas also caused delays in supplying Tokyo.  The next failure was a combination of destruction of road and rail systems and transport needed to send supplies to and from the disaster areas.  This led to difficulties and a shortage of getting the items to stores in Tokyo.  The last problem for supplies was entirely a societal failure due to herd mentality.  People overreacted to the situation and started hoarding supplies because of the situation.  What would have been minimal problems for the first two failures developed into a very big one.  Goods couldn't be delivered to stores fast enough due to a huge demand and a delay in supply.  What would have been a relatively normal situation quickly became widespread food shortages.  The now food shortages exasperated the situation and fully developed the herd mentality.  People now seeing no food in stores also started to hoard food that they found leaving nothing.  Government officials explaining the situation fell on deaf ears as people could only see empty shelves and weren't going to trust the government about it or think through the situation.  So for a few days, stores were empty to the point that they wouldn't open and people would wait for delivery trucks to come or a store's opening in the morning to rush in and buy the food they needed.

I wasn't really affected as I had done grocery shopping before anything happened.  Also, restaurants still had food to sell even if the stores didn't.  Nobody was going to starve and the crisis was over in a few days as delivery was able to get back on schedule and people had already bought anything they could need.  Seeing how quickly Tokyo could go bad without damage in the city itself was almost the biggest shock of the whole thing for me.

While the shortages were resolved quickly, the rest of the after effects are going to be much longer lasting.  Obviously the biggest one on the international news cycle was the disaster at the Fukushima Dai Ichi Nuclear Power Plant, however I'm going to leave that as its own post for next time.  Related though is one of the other large crisis for Japan.  After the earthquake and continuing until at least the fall will be energy shortages / an energy crisis.  A lot of the electricity used in the Tokyo / Kanto area is produced in the northeast or Tōhoku region, the area hardest hit by the earthquake and tsunami.  Many of the plants were damaged or forced offline.  Fukushima's Dai Ichi Plant supplied electricity to Tokyo and obviously its 6 reactors are permanently shut down.  Other nuclear plants in the area that supplied Tokyo were also shut down due to safety concerns.  Making things worse is there has been little rain in the area and hydroelectric plants are also below usual production.  This led to an energy crisis very soon after the earthquake.  The first couple weeks were a huge problem, but everyone has figured out how to conserve energy and it's no longer the problem it was presently.  The first couple weeks, a widespread grid failure with random blackouts seemed possible.  To save the region from the chaos of widespread unexpected blackouts, planned blackouts were instituted.  Every area was divided into one of five groups that was given a 3 hour planned blackout, where they would turn off the juice for wide areas.  For a few days, some of the groups had to go through 2 blackout periods in a day.  This affected the whole Kanto region, except for areas deemed vital.  The area I'm in was actually one of those areas and while I feel bad about not sharing the burden, it was fortunate to not have to worry about the refrigerator.  That and the laptop were the only things I ever had on at home even though the still cold weather and typical Japanese insulation (basically none) made things uncomfortable for a while.  At first, lots of companies didn't take what was happening so seriously, although the electric company was also downplaying the situation so it initially didn't seem so bad.  After a few close calls to widespread blackouts, both started to work a lot more on fixing the situation.

Shibuya 109: A famous department store on one of Tokyo's busiest intersections.  These spots are usually a sea of neon.

The huge video advertising screens silent for once.
The first thoughts that come to mind when thinking about Tokyo are the bright neon and the mass crowds of people.  That first month, Tokyo had switched to a strange alter-ego.  During the day, it had become quiet like a town with nobody out.  A far cry from its usual bustling metropolis.  At nights, it had changed from a sea of neon to incredibly dark.  Only the first floor was allowed its usual light to help people on their way.  Over time things have gotten more back to normal for the moment.  This was due to more supply getting to the area along with better conservation.  Other regions have sent excess power to the region and many of the trains and stations are supplying some of their own power.  Conservation has also gotten better with large companies working with the electric company and the natural byproduct of spring arriving and people no longer needing their heaters.

However, the situation isn't over yet.  With the electrical infrastructure unable to be rebuilt by the summer and the increase demand due to the hot and humid summers, the energy crisis this summer might be worse than it was initially.  At least there will be more time to plan for this, but I imagine this summer could be unpleasant.  Already the trains have been hot and humid a couple of days and this was only in May.

The train saving electricity campaign / awareness poster.  These are on posters in train stations and stickers  inside the trains.

The other major impact being economical.  First being the money in damages lost and the costs of rebuilding along with the loss of production.  The two other big ones being taxes raised to pay for the cost and the impact on the yen due to everything.  The sales tax has been 5% in Japan, but that is likely to change.  A proposal has been in place to raise it to 7-8% soon for the next few years and for it to go to 10% after that. [1]  The yen has also felt a strong impact.  While at first, I thought the yen might get weaker due to everything, the opposite has taken place.  The yen is at 80 yen to the dollar now, where before it was at the 90-100 yen to the dollar and a few years ago at 130 yen to the dollar.  This is even after Japan, United States and EU market intervention.  The explanation for this is monetary investors have speculated Japanese businesses will be buying yen to help the rebuilding process of Japan, so investors have been buying yen making it stronger.  While painful to exchange dollars to yen, it could work out for me making yen if it stays like this when I go to exchange back.  It has added another headache for the Japanese economy as demand for Japanese exports (now more expensive due to exchange rates) has dropped.

While the first few weeks had some serious after effects, most things in Japan besides the disaster areas have returned to normal now.  Summer will bring a new set of problems due to energy shortages, but after that the energy crisis should be solved.  What hasn't really been felt much yet, but what will be the longest lasting effect will be economical.  The next part will cover the other long lasting problem dealing with the problems with the nuclear plant.

References:

1. "Japan Eyes Sales Tax Hike, Using Reserves for Budget," Reuters.
http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/06/17/japan-economy-noda-idUSL3E7HH03N20110617.