
Low Desire Society: the New Wealth of Nations in the "era of Lost Ambition
About This Novel
"Low Desire Society" is a best-selling social observation work recently published by the famous Japanese management scientist and "Mr. Strategy" Kenichi Omae. The book focuses on Japan's current socio-economic status and characteristics, and summarizes social problems that other mature countries have not encountered yet into one word, "Low Desire Society" - -The population is shrinking, super-aging, and more and more young people have lost their ambition and desire; citizens hold a large amount of financial assets, and companies also have high internal reserves, but they fail to use funds effectively. Neither monetary easing policies nor public investment can improve consumer confidence, and money-spreading policies cannot revitalize the economy...
What Readers Think
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Community(0)
Official(4)Scraped 3d ago
person who reads
Very nice book
Typical Japanese thoughts
The typical Japanese way of thinking and expression is completely incomparable to Ultraman.
Mind your own business.
Women, the improvement of this background does not happen overnight. However, Japan has a motto since ancient times: "If you love your child, let him go out for exercise." This requires abandoning the practice of leaving children's education entirely to schools, teachers or private schools. Only parents can provide children with a global-minded "aspirational education".
Rating
Community(0)
Official(4)Scraped 3d ago
person who reads
Very nice book
Typical Japanese thoughts
The typical Japanese way of thinking and expression is completely incomparable to Ultraman.
Mind your own business.
Women, the improvement of this background does not happen overnight. However, Japan has a motto since ancient times: "If you love your child, let him go out for exercise." This requires abandoning the practice of leaving children's education entirely to schools, teachers or private schools. Only parents can provide children with a global-minded "aspirational education".
