Yes, Warren Buffett had already started buying Japanese companies two years earlier, but it was in 2023 that the global mainstream followed. The combination of cheap yen, geostrategic realities, and a newfound can-do attitude among domestic leaders has put Japan back in play as a global contender. Leaders in finance, industry, and innovation around the world are now pressed by their boards to develop concrete Japan strategies. Yokoso! Welcome back! What took you so long?
Beyond the current hype
Before we get too carried away by the current Japan hype, let me outline some key forces that, in my view, will work to create sustainable Japan opportunities over the next decades, for both global and domestic companies. Here are four Japan megatrends poised to shape the next phase of Japan’s economic and social evolution.
1. Demographics Forces Industrial Consolidation
Japan has about 3.6 million companies, 2.5 million of which are owned and run by founders who will be over 70 years old next year. Of these, 1.6 million do not have a successor, a son or daughter interested in taking over.
This demographic reality has unleashed a growing tsunami of mergers and acquisitions (M&As). Businesses that were never for sale are now up for grabs. Your chances of partnering with or buying a Japanese company have never been better. The M&A wave will get bigger. Roll-ups and industrial consolidation will create unprecedented opportunities for global players to raise their market share and profit from increased economies of scale.
2. Freeing Up Household Wealth
Japanese households have accumulated some $30 trillion of wealth. About $20 trillion of this is in financial assets, with about half - $10 trillion - stashed away as tansu yokin, the famous mattress money.
Again, demographics is key to unlocking real structural change. About $12 trillion of these household financial assets are owned by people aged over 70.
This means $5 or 6 trillion—or 1.3 to 1.5 times Japan’s current gross domestic product—will become unfrozen over the next decade. Even after inheritance tax, this implies a significant boost to the purchasing power of Japan’s younger generation.
Make no mistake: the legacy of the legendarily high savings rate of Japan’s baby boomers will significantly boost next-generation purchasing power. Most economic forecasts completely ignore this wealth transfer effect, thus underestimating the potential growth in domestic demand.
3. From Seniority-based to Merit-based Pay
The war for talent is intensifying and will only get worse. Japan’s young generation feels its power, and the tables have turned. Graduates are no longer begging for jobs. Companies are begging increasingly scarce graduates to join. And retention of employees is becoming tough. According to several studies, as many as one in five University of Tokyo graduates now quit their initial employer within the first five years.
Importantly, employees don’t just want higher pay. They also seek greater responsibility and impact. If you joined a top Keidanren company in the 1960s, it took on average 13 years for you to become the general manager. Today it takes 24 years.
Companies which inspire and empower their employees will pull away from those that insist on the old ways. Labor mobility will surge, and companies that offer genuine and transparent career planning and merit-based compensation are poised to move ahead. Here, global companies still have a lead, but as local Japanese companies adapt, the war for talent—and thus the need for increasingly creative leadership—will intensify. The net result? Productivity will surge, and so will employee incomes—yet another reason why standard economic forecasts are too pessimistic on domestic demand.
4. Open-Door Japan
Japan will become an immigration powerhouse. Before the pandemic, the country was on track to accept about 150,000 new non-Japanese employees per year. This more than doubled to almost 350,000 in the first half of 2023. There are now approximately 3.2 million non-Japanese residents of Japan, up from barely half a million 30 years ago. Visa and permanent-residency requirements continue to ease. Most importantly, the biggest obstacle to employing non-Japanese talent—seniority-based rather than merit-based compensation—is beginning to change. All said, it is now perfectly reasonable to expect that about 10 percent of employees will be non-Japanese by 2030. That’s more than double the current rate of just below four percent.
Common Theme
Underlying these four Japan megatrends is demographics. Far from being a negative—fewer people must equal lower consumption—Japan’s demographics will turn out to be a catalyst for positive change.
Industries will consolidate, thus allowing greater efficiencies and economies of scale.
The mattress-money wealth of Japanese households will be freed and reenter economic circulation.
Increasingly scarce labor will be empowered and gain purchasing power.
And global talent will build careers and make their fortunes here in Japan.
Importantly, all these forces represent real structural change that will remain in place for the foreseeable future.
Predictable. Reliable. Full of opportunity. Welcome back to Japan !
Thank you for reading. As always, comments welcome. Many Cheers ;-j
This article was recently published in the ACCJ Journal here
I hope they don't accept too many people, I don't want Japan to be flooded by too many outsiders, sure I want to move there but to have too many will dilute the Japanese nature of Japan. I also hope they don't get too capitalistic as too much capitalism tends to cause the country to become flooded with an ocean of outsiders who wash away the native culture.
My hope is Japan remains nationalistic, remains Japanese and retains that flavour and character.
Thank you for posting Jesper, interesting as always. Two quick questions ... 1) of the 1.6 million companies with no heir apparent, do we know roughly what portion are healthy or stable versus zombies? 2) regarding wealth transfer to the younger generation, what is your thought about the portion that is tied up in marginal real estate versus more liquid assets such as securities or death benefit annuities, etc? Just curious. Thanks as always.