This reminds of the time I took a colleague on a tour of Tokyo during a time when the nth post-bubble recession had been announced.
Afterward sitting in a Doutour's coffee shop in watching the, er, world go by, he turns to me and says
"If this is a recession, I'd like to take one of these back home."
Still Japan has been progressively drawing down it's initial high savings rate, however, it still is positive. At some point there will probably be bigger problems esp due to the legacy of the so-called bridges to nowhere govt spending programs.
Anyways, good article by Spenglerman.
There is another scenario.
The rise of promising simplistic highly-appealing yet complete wrong supposed solutions to a frightened tea-steeped population. No George F. Kennan's on the horizon.
Blaming foreigners for one's problems [something that Japan, Korea, and China also excel at], a reduction in the social safety net with spending
redirected to the govt-military-industrial complex and more foreign misadventures in a mistaken attempt to fix the problems that have their origins
back home.
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Anyways, the decline of the current
de facto Pax Americana, or it's evolution into something far less benign, is not something I look forward to . . . better the devil one knows . . .
Never criticize anyone until you've walked several kilometres in their shoes.
Because
1. You're now several kilometres away; and
2. You've got their shoes.