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Is it Hard to Adapt to Living in Japan?

Tuesday, August 24th, 2010

The idea of moving to Japan for school or for work has become extremely popular in recent times. The country offers many great opportunities for people who are not native to the country. The thrill of learning a new culture is another reason why living in Japan is an exciting prospect for many people. The thrill of learning the Japanese language and being immersed in the culture is very exciting for many.

Living in a different country can be a challenge for anyone, so realizing that the Japanese are very particular about their customs and correct manners is very important. As a foreigner it is important that you become familiar with the basic rules of Japanese society.

While many of their people will cut a foreigner some slack on incorrect etiquette, if one performs something that is extremely disrespectful, then it might not be overlooked. Additionally, it is in your best interest as well to learn a little bit about the rules of a country that you are visiting or planning to live in.

An example of a Japanese culture difference involves entering a home. In Japan it is expected that outside shoes will be removed. The host then provides slippers for the guests to wear. Many people are aware of this custom of theirs; however, there are other shoe etiquette customs that are required in Japan that are not as widely known. For example, another Japanese society custom requires that any room with a tatami floor is to only be stepped on with socks or bare feet. Additionally, there are special slippers that are to be worn exclusively in the bathroom.

While it is important to try and learn as much about a new culture as you can, it would be impossible to think that you could learn everything about a totally new culture right away. This is true for anyone trying to integrate into Japanese society as well. If you have had extra time or exposure to a particular way of life, then it might make it easier for you.

For someone who is transplanting from a western country to Japan some customs will seem more foreign and some might seem more familiar. For example, in western culture it is considered bad manners to blow your nose at the dinner table, and this is indeed true in Japan as well. As time goes by it will become easier and easier to integrate into the new culture and you will no doubt find that living in Japan is easy.

While many westerners are making the decision to move to Japan for either school or work, they are also taking on the challenge of learning a new culture. There are many aspects to the Japanese culture that are extremely different from western culture and can take some getting used to, yet as time goes on it will become easier to integrate into the new culture. Once a person has gotten to this stage, then living in Japan will be much easier for them.

Bubble Economy and Defaulting Real Estate Loans

Thursday, June 10th, 2010

Major reasons for default risk on commercial real estate loans is a bubble economy. An often-quoted definition of “bubble” is the one given by Stiglitz as follows: ” If the reason for the price is high today is only because investors believe that the selling price will be higher tomorrow – when “fundamental” factors do not seem to justify such a price – then a bubble exists”.

The basic reason for the connection between a bubble and banking problems is over-expansion of bank credit fuelled by the build-up of real estate prices and increasing credit risks. The acceleration of economic growth and increased demand for real estate triggers “euphoria” as households and companies anticipate these further properties’ prices rise and increase their willingness to engage in debt-financed investment.

There is a special thing about real estate lending: as price increases create “an extra” collateral that can be used for additional borrowing.
Increases in the price of real estate property held by companies mean a rise in the value of this asset on their balance sheet. Such capital gains lead to easier access to bank loans, which may be used for new productive investments or more speculative real estate investments. For various reasons lenders may incorrectly rely on trend-based analyses, which assumes that current market conditions continue in the future.

Thus, increased real estate prices, when related to fundamental improvements in the economic outlook or declines in real interest rates, can lead to increased borrowing. Therefore bank lending may also be a source for upward pressure on real estate prices; especially, if banks relax lending policies. Thus, lenders may undertake extremely tolerant lending policies at the peak of the cycle and extremely conservative lending policies at the trough of the cycle.

At the peak of the cycle banks may have borrowers that are highly exposed to a sharp price decline. These borrowers are known as the latest entrants in the real estate markets and they are especially vulnerable, since they have borrowed when prices were close to the peak and possibly expected that the price rally and trend would continue. These borrowers would experience the largest capital losses and the largest risk of default. Once these borrowers stand face to face with the possibility of default, they are also likely to take increasing risk (moral hazard).

Once the peak of a cycle is being approached, real estate prices become increasingly cut off from their “fundamental values” and vulnerable compared to exogenous shocks. The shock can be an unanticipated change in the overall economic performance. This event damages market confidence and causes a capital flight away from the relevant assets. When real estate prices are so high that buyers do not want to buy anymore at this price level, and of course, sellers are not able to sell at his level, there will be market correction – a bubble crashes. The price collapse can be affected substantially by forced sales of properties. The difficulties experienced by borrowers are transmitted to banks. The bad loans of banks and capital adequacy problems may lead to tightening of lending standards and credit rationing.

The next situation was common in Japan at the end of 80′s: Land is the main problem in the non-performing loans held by the Japanese financial institutions. During the period of the bubble economy, banks competed with one another in offering a large amount of loans and accepting the pieces of land as collateral. The combination of low interest rate and abundant liquidity activated real estate investments and affected most sharply on the inelastic urban land supply to generate accelerating in increase of land prices. Increases in the market value of land (land as asset) held by corporations mean a rise in the value of this asset on their balance sheet.

There have been two links between increases in land values and banks’ credit in the Japanese financial environmental. First, banks gave
land-related loans directly to real estate companies or indirectly trough loans to subsidiary companies that are the main loan channels to real
estate companies in Japan. Such lending policies rose very sharply and accelerated joint land and equities asset prices. Secondly, banks in
Japan have traditionally relied on collateral rather than project quality and cash flows. The soaring value of land provided the collateral against which Japanese firms could borrow at home to buy assets abroad.

After the collapse of the bubble economy, however, those pieces of land could not be disposed of in order to reconstruct loans because the prices of the land fell significantly and banks have been obliged to retain the pieces of land with depreciated values. Liquidity was cut back because of restriction policies and the discount rate was raised five times from 2.5 percent to 6.0 percent by the end of 1990. The so-called bad-loan disposal, which is expected to continue for the next several years, is actually nothing, but a higher level of the reserve fund covering the losses of loans.

The reserve fund for loan losses is a fund prepared to cover the losses caused by default of borrowers and it gives favourable tax treatment for such funds. Non-performing loans have not been worked out directly, but reserve funds were raised. This means that the indirect “disposal” of bad loans is officially approved for taxation purposes and the disposal method used for the past several years has simply built reserve funds. In other words, non-performing loans are still recorded on the financial institution’s balance sheets and therefore the amount of bank loans has not been reduced. The real estate market is depressed with the illiquid lands kept idle by banks without being traded in the secondary market.

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