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What is more, demand in many Asian countries is weak. Some places, including South Korea, are experiencing business-cycle slumps.
I have a weird theory. I think a lot of Asians are just not that into consumerism. They just don't feel like owning a lot of stuff and are content with less. This was the story of Japan in the lost decade(s) - the japanese didn't buy all the new tech like video recorders and TVs and VHS and stuff themselves, they exported it. China, likewise, right now is pumping out exports - the worlds factory produces everything but only recently for themselves. South Korea has lots of giant megacorps but the median Korean owns less than people in Spain. It's cultural.
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That seems quite plausible. Having lived in Asia for most of my childhood, and America for most of my adulthood, I observe truth in what you say.
But I have another theory. I think it's not just that Asians are less consumeristic, it's that they have less space. American living spaces are huge compared to Asians. They can literally fit more stuff in their homes. I wonder if Asians are less consumeristic simply because they don't have as much space to put things. No one is buying a fishing boat or a dune buggy in Asia, as I see many Americans buying, for example.
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This is very interesting. If you wanna piss off Americans talk about their culture in comparison to any other. Its fun to watch. In my view we could probably all learn a thing or two from different cultures and their values.
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Very interesting
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5 sats \ 0 replies \ @gmd 19 Sep
Can't read but I'm assuming they didn't print as much money like we stupidly did?
Inflation reduction act was so absurd...
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the irony of it all while America's firing up the inflation barbecue again, Asia's economies are bundling up against a deflationary draft. This piece nails it: China's got its foot on the export hose, flooding the world with cheap stuff amid its own property slump and overcapacity woes, which is basically exporting deflation like it's the new silk road. Throw in plummeting commodity prices—oil's dipped below $70 a barrel lately, thanks to sluggish global demand and OPEC's mixed signals—and you've got a recipe for "creaky growth" that's more like a full-on stall in places like Thailand, where tourism's rebounding but manufacturing's wheezing.
Digging deeper, deflation isn't just a benign cooldown; it's a sneaky beast that can spiral economies into stagnation. Remember Japan's "lost decades" starting in the '90s? Prices fell, folks hoarded cash waiting for even cheaper deals, investment tanked, and wages flatlined—echoes of that here, especially with Asia's aging populations (China's workforce is shrinking faster than a bad investment). In the Philippines, where remittances from overseas workers usually buoy things, even that's not enough to counter the drag from weak exports. And India at 1.6%? That's a far cry from its usual 5-6% norm, hinting at rural distress and monsoon mishaps curbing food prices, but it could crimp the RBI's room to cut rates without risking a rupee slide.
Asia's last big deflation scare was post-1997 financial crisis, when Thailand's baht collapse triggered a regional contagion—today's vibe feels eerily similar, minus the currency crashes (yet). If central banks don't pivot smartly—maybe easing like the Fed but with an eye on yuan devaluation risks—we could see a broader chill hitting global trade. Props to The Economist for spotlighting this; it's a wake-up call that the world's economic weather isn't uniform. Anyone else betting on a commodity rebound to thaw things out?
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