For years, defenders of the Chinese economy have tried to come fierce by saying, “This is just like Japan. A slowdown, not a collapse. China will manage it well.” I’ve got news for you. China is not Japan. And China’s economic crisis will be far deeper, more painful, and more dangerous than Japan’s so-called lost decades. Here’s why. First and foremost, Japan slowed with wealth. China is stagnating with debt. When Japan entered its stagnation in the 1990s, it did so at as one of the wealthiest societies in the world.
GDP per capita greater than $30,000, high savings rate, worldclass infrastructure, high levels of innovation, deep social trust and stability. Japan slowed down, but its people remained prosperous, healthy, and secure. Now look at China. GDP per capita only $12,000, far below Japan at its peak. The private savings pool is being drained to cover falling property values and youth unemployment. Infrastructure is overbuilt and malinvested. Productivity is stagnating. Debt is imploding.
Total debt to GDP is now more than 300%. China is hitting stagnation before getting rich. That is a catastrophic difference. Number two, Japan had rule of law. China has political fear. Japan entered its stagnation with a functioning rule of law system. Private property was respected. Courts were predictable. Corporate governance was stable. China the opposite. The party can seize assets at will. The legal system is deeply politicized. The private sector leaves on constant fear of crackdowns. Jackma, anyone? Capital controls prevent capital flight, but also crush foreign investor confidence.
When an economy hits trouble, rule of law is critical to managing recovery and stability. China lacks this foundation. Instead, Xiinping’s regime is tightening ideological control. The worst possible policy in a stagnation. Number three, Japan had a demographics trouble. China has a demographic disaster. Japan’s aging population created headwinds, but Japan managed to maintain its core working age population for many years. Immigration, while limited, helped at the margins.
China’s situation is radically worse. Fertility rate is now one of the lowest in the world below 1.1. Population is already shrinking. The working age population is shrinking faster than Japan ever did. And there’s no viable immigration path. China is not culturally or politically prepared to welcome millions of foreigners. And this is just an outright economic collapse, demographic collapse. I’m sorry. No country in history has sustained high growth rates under such conditions.
Number four, Japan had a strong consumer base. China’s consumers are terrified. Japan’s middle class remains strong and confident. High quality employment, reasonable home ownership rates, cultural willingness to spend. China’s consumers today wages are stagnating. Youth unemployment is a crisis. Even after reclassifying the data, real youth joblessness remains above 20%. Real estate, the main household wealth, has collapsed. Cultural fear is driving saving, not spending.
The government’s own surveys show collapsing consumer confidence. An economy with scared consumers and collapsing property wealth cannot simply stimulate its way out of stagnation. Number five, Japan had a global allies. China is becoming isolated. Japan’s slowdown occurred within a supportive global order. It remained a core US ally. It integrated further into global supply chains. It remained a trusted partner for Western capital. China today is moving in the opposite direction. FDI is collapsing at a multi-deade low and western firms they’re diversifying away from China at accelerating rates.
Geopolitical tensions are rising with the US, EU, Japan, India. The Bel and Road initiative is backfiring with debt defaults and political backlash across Asia and Africa. An aging debt burden economy can survive if it remains globally integrated while China is isolating itself at the worst possible time. So my verdict, the China Japan comparison is a dangerous illusion. Japan’s last decades were a slowdown but with dignity, prosperity and stability.
China is heading towards something much worse. Stagnation without wealth. Debt without escape. Demographic collapse without solutions. Political fear without reform. Global isolation without fallback options. Those who claim this is just like Japan are either blind or deliberately misleading you. China’s situation is not Japan 2.0. It is Argentina with deflation. It is Soviet Union 1980s with a collapsing crash with a housing crash.
It is a debt driven politically unstable globally isolated economy spiraling downward. and the world had better wake up to this fact fast. If you found this breakdown useful, you will also like this video where I break down the eight signs that um show the Chinese economy is terminally sick. I’m covering the real story of China’s collapse every week without the spin and without the fantasy.
