• Debt at 250% of GDP.
• Growth stuck near zero for decades.
• Yet no economic collapse.
Here’s how Japan broke every economic rule and still survived:
In the late 1980s, Japan was a financial superpower.
The stock market was booming, real estate prices were astronomical, and wealth seemed limitless.
But beneath the surface was a ticking time bomb.
Banks handed out loans with reckless abandon, fueling an unsustainable bubble.
When the crash came in the early 1990s, it wiped out trillions in market value and put the nation into a prolonged economic slump known as “The Lost Decade.”
Unlike other countries that bounce back after recessions, Japan got stuck.
Growth slowed to a crawl.
Businesses became cautious.
Consumers saved instead of spent.
But remarkably, despite all this, Japan never collapsed.
While Japan's debt is massive, almost all of it is owed domestically—to Japanese banks, pension funds, and households—not foreign lenders.
This means Japan’s financial system isn’t at the mercy of external forces.
Then there’s the Bank of Japan (BoJ).
For years, it has kept interest rates at or below zero to encourage borrowing and spending.
It also pumped vast amounts of money into the economy through a policy called "quantitative easing"—buying government bonds to inject cash into the system.
Critics argue that this approach merely props up a fragile system.
But Japan’s approach prevented mass unemployment, bank collapses, or hyperinflation—common signs of economic crisis elsewhere.
However, Japan isn’t invincible.
The population is shrinking and aging rapidly.
Nearly 30% of its citizens are over 65.
Fewer workers mean less economic output, lower tax revenue, and greater strain on social services like healthcare and pensions.
Japan's government continues to experiment with policies like:
• Increasing immigration to counteract population decline.
• Investing in automation and robotics to boost productivity.
• Gradual fiscal consolidation to stabilize debt growth.
Only time will tell what will happen.
What do you think about Japan's economic paradox?
"The Digital Gold Rush Is Here."
My threads generate 50M impressions every month.
If you are looking for high-quality, personalized & viral threads like the one you're reading...
DM me and let's work together 🤝
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
97% of it is just numbers in a bank’s computer—created out of thin air.
Banks don’t lend you money—they create it when you take a loan.
And when you repay it, that money disappears.
This is the greatest illusion in modern finance. Let me explain...
In the UK, only 3% of money exists as cash.
The other 97%? It’s digital—created by commercial banks when they issue loans.
When a bank lends you money, it doesn't transfer existing cash.
It creates new money by simply typing numbers into a computer.
This means:
• Every mortgage, car loan, or credit card transaction = new money.
• When you repay that loan, the money disappears.
• The bank keeps the interest as profit.
Since banks create money through lending, they control who gets it.
A chicken war from 60 years ago still makes trucks more expensive today.
Now, Trump wants 60% tariffs on China and 20% on all imports—the boldest trade move in decades.
Will it protect the economy or spark a global showdown?
Here’s what history teaches us:
Before diving into Trump’s plan, let’s revisit a famous example of the Chicken War of the 1960s.
In post-WWII West Germany, American chicken imports became wildly popular.
By 1962, U.S. farmers were selling over $50 million worth of chicken annually (about $500 million today).
Upset European farmers pushed back, leading to tariffs on U.S. chicken, increasing its cost significantly.
In retaliation, the U.S. slapped a 25% tariff on imported trucks, which devastated German truck sales in America and shaped the global auto market for decades.