Quote:
Originally Posted by veep
???
The entire planet runs out of Silicon Valley. Tokyo is cute but what does it really do?
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Tokyo directs close to $1 trillion USD in annual FDI to the US, a
substantial portion of which goes to Bay Area financing, whether through VC or directly. No other country in the world invests as much in the US economy as Japan does, and no other non-American metro contributes more to the US economy than Tokyo does via its corporate base and as the home of the Japanese federal government.
Metro Tokyo is effectively the largest foreign investor in 39 US states, including all of the major economic engines like California, Texas, NY, Washington, and Massachusetts.
Half a million Americans work
manufacturing jobs alone in the US for Tokyo-based companies. Close to 2 million when you expand to include any Tokyo-based company.
If you're American and have or plan on enjoying a private pension in your later years, you can likely in large part thank Tokyo for your fund's solvency.
And this is just in an American context. Japan is very active in FDI throughout Asia-Pacific. Tokyo is
far more impactful on the daily lives of Filipinos, Taiwanese, Thais, Indonesians, Malaysians, and arguably even South Koreans than New York, London, or any Western city.
In the context of this discussion, Tokyo public transit is on another tier than the rest of the planet. Comparing Kansai's network to New York's or London's is more germane. The Yamanote Line's daily ridership surpasses the entire New York MTA's system-wide daily ridership, and manages to do so with far nicer cars, stations, and service. Plus 30-second headway during commute times. There are 138 train and subway lines in Metro Tokyo, with over 1,200 stations. This doesn't include Express and Limited Express versions.
I own a house in Bunkyo Ward, Tokyo. I also own a cottage in the woods in Nagano Prefecture, about 150 miles from my house. I do
not own a car. Instead, it takes 3 minutes to get from my doorsteps to the subway platform at the closest station to my house, and another ~2 hours of relaxing express train to Nagano Station. I don't think there are many other (non-Japanese) cities where C-suites eschew cars because the trains are just that good.