Space_Chief
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Many of you are missing the most important ingredient that countries like South Korea, Japan, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Singapore and soon China had in common. Education, and not run-of-the-mill education you get in other first world countries like the USA, UK etc. Those kids spend an insane amount of time in school, and even go to school after school. It's not unheard of for kids in East Asia to be in the classroom until 23:00.
That's part of the reason they were able to industrialise so quickly and become dominant economies despite having low populations (Excluding China and Japan). Some might think it's too harsh but I bet it cuts down on delinquency as well since all that school keeps kids off the street and forces them not to spend so much time screwing around playing video games, loitering, partying etc. Academic competition is embedded in the culture over there.
They also pump out insane numbers of technical graduates. Their tertiary course choices are more pragmatic. None of this "do what you love" BS. Kids go study engineering, accounting, computer science etc. because taking care of your parents in their old age is common over there, and that requires money a sociology/music graduate isn't going to make.
You see you don't need cram school to be a good worker in a factory. These cram schools initially in Japan and later Taiwan and ? Korea are about getting into the best universities. But that's if you want to get into the best university or the best course.If you're gonna be assembling walkmans for Sony or microwave ovens for Matsu****a you don't need that.
Sure you get good innovators and engineers but the likes of the Japanese showed they could adapt to Western education and knowledge very quickly from the 1800s.When did Perry open up Japan (1853) and when did Japan become a dominant sea faring nation? Continuing at that rate the Japanese would have easily conquered the British Empire if that still existed in the 20th century.
I think it's the culture rather. The social order is such that people don't stand out and rely on their elders and superiors to know better. They also are able to work for the good of their nation.
Japan is a very nationalistic state and the same is occurring in Korea and China.
People are just more loyal in that regard. In the West people now feel shame about their heritage, the Japanese still revere their WW2 soldiers. They still hunt dolphins and whales. They still have heavy restrictions on immigration which are actually common among all East Asian nations.
Yes but that's also failing behind as Western BS contaminates them too.
Regardless of why they study so much at the end of the day you end up with a highly educated population. This is very good for a country even if many of them end up as factory workers. You still end up with better factory workers too. An educated person can pick up and learn how to assemble an engine made up of over a thousand parts quicker than some ordinary slacker kid.
Japan knew that they would eventually be invaded and given a serious PK if they let westerners outpace them too much technologically. It was learn or die.
This mentality is actually what caused them to fall behind Europe in the first place and had dire consequences, especially in China's case.
Perhaps their nationalism adds to their sucess but it's not the be all and end all IMO. Many other Asian countries share similar cultural values but are still poor and dysfunctional. Until they sort out their education as well they'll stay where they are and be poor.
No not everyone in Japan studied like this. Only the kids who had ambitions to go to really good degrees. For every engineer there there are many ordinary salarymen and office ladies. Your average worker wasn't highly educated. Maybe even went to a tech oriented high school and then got on the job training. There were and are also vocational schools where people can go to enter a trade, for example be a bank clerk or a hospital orderly. What these people do have, by the large, is a work ethic and a feeling of responsibility. They worked hard, in exchange for benefits and support from the company. They were loyal to their country, family and company. The emperor signified the country. He is still a very revered figure there.
Lots of countries knew this yet were not able to deliver.
No. Japan was isolated from Europe and science never developed there on a large scale as a worldview of inquiry. They only traded a bit with the Dutch but then for 200 odd years prior to Perry they were pretty much isolated - they did so on their own. It was a political move and had nothing to do with their culture, only during the Meiji Restoration did they reopen ties and learn from the West. Their culture allows them to have a very low crime rate and support each other when things go bad.
It's a good thing. Their culture allowed them to be strong pre-WW1 (kick the Russian navy's butt), and then in WW2 and finally after WW2.
Japan has been very, very successful. Especially successful. I agree it's not the only factor.
...In the West people now feel shame about their heritage...
You write a lot. Some things make sense and some not. I for one do not buy the above statement. I found Europeans to be very proud of their achievements and who they are. Even Germans are proud of themselves. Google: "Ich bin stoltz ein Deutscher zu sein". The only people not to proud of who they are, are we Africans. In South African it is not unusual to change your (sir) name to some western sounding crap. Why? We are busy throwing our culture down the drain.
I'm obviously speaking very generally here. Obviously not everyone but I'd wager the average Japanese kid is more educated than the average SA kid by quite some margin.
It's absolutely cultural IMO. Once Europeans stopped blindly following their elders/royalty/religious dogma and embraced rationalism and the scientific method they leap-frogged over Asia.
Every once in a while inventions were shown to the Chinese emperors but they scoffed at them as they saw Europeans as barbarians. Their culture keeps their societies stable, but on the other hand doesn't leave as much room for innovation and enabled Westerners to blitz past them. "Us-and-them" mentality isn't always a good thing.
On the other hand their nationalism and xenophobia is the reason they can be great countries but never super sucessful IMO.
Look the US, they suck in some of the best immigrants from all over the world and profit greatly from it. Elon Musk, Sergey Brin, Einstein, Linus Torvalds, Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar, Wernher von Braun etc. all contributed greatly to making the US the technological and scientific powerhouse it is today. East Asian countries will never hit that kind of critical mass because they exclude other people, whereas the US draws brilliant people from all over the world.
Japan is stagnating because they've pretty much gone as far as they can go with their current population and the state of technology these days. South Korea will probably hit a similar wall soon enough. China can still progress because of the number of people they have.
get those herbivore men to take up their duty again for their country.
You write a lot. Some things make sense and some not. .
/volunteers
Hmm... I think it's the opposite. They've gone stale and cold blooded. Need to stop blurring out the pussies and become real men.Japanese need to ban all that porn manga and anime to get those herbivore men to take up their duty again for their country.
Hmm... I think it's the opposite. They've gone stale and cold blooded. Need to stop blurring out the pussies and become real men.![]()
Japan has reached Western lack of children. That's killing them. But they will reach some point and recover. Their workers are also expensive. They outsourced much of their manufacturing to Asia and that's also a problem. With more old people more is needed to maintain them with fewer youngsters to work. So they need to breed basically. Japanese need to ban all that porn manga and anime to get those herbivore men to take up their duty again for their country.
In addition remember the USA's heyday seems to have passed - despite taking more and more immigrants.
Even though Japan made it to number 2 in terms of GDP there was still a very large gap between the two. Even now US nominal GDP is over three times the size of Japan's. Germany isn't too far behind Japan either even though they only have ~60% the population of Japan and a smaller country.
Whether they would have been even more successful if they had land mass like the US? Probably. But as successful as the actual US? I don't know. I think living on top of each other and having few resources forced them to an extent to be as productive as they are. They could have ended up complacent as China once was.
On immigration I agree the US takes in let's say not so desirable immigrants to but I'm a supporter of letting in productive, upstanding, law-abiding people. On engineering, engineering and science go hand in hand. You could have engineering to some extent without science but you'd eventually hit a wall, especially when it comes to non-intuitive stuff where you have to take things like relativity and quantum mechanics into account. Lots of inventions also came from scientists and engineers found practical uses for them.
Even if they didn't have such a low birth rate they'd hit a wall eventually. If you're only using brilliant/productive people who happened to be born in your country, whereas I'm importing such people from all over the world, including your country, I'll have more of them than you do. But as you said keeping the population from splintering is also important.
They're still way ahead and pressing forward in absolute terms. Just the sheer amount of global businesses/technology that have significantly altered the world's way of life in the past 20 years is astounding, and all just from one country. You can get far being the world's factory floor but eventually you'll have to switch to innovation to be super successful. The US wins hands down in this regard. Even from a military perspective they're extremely powerful.
We let in practically everybody so why are we not ahead of the world then? Because nobody wants to stay here let alone come here. I think something most people missed is that these countries have an environment that fosters investment in the future. They take care of their citizens. Ours is set up so that everyone wants to invest in themselves somewhere else.
You can build GPS satellites without knowing about the theory of relativity for example.
All good points Space_Chief. But did you know the most educated immigrant community in the US are Nigerians? You can have a successful country by cherry picking from others too. There is probably some optimal point of immigrants and natives somewhere. Germany isn't that homogeneous either, they've got immigrants from all over Europe and Turkey.
The US military gives it a financial edge no doubt but it also saves SK and Japan money. They can focus more on development instead of worrying about defending themselves from North Korea and China.