The low cost of living in Japan: one expat argues that it's easy to cut daily living expenses in Tokyo and Osaka.THE ECONOMIST INTELLIGENCE UNIT The Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) is part of The Economist Group. It is a research and advisory company providing country, industry and management analysis worldwide and incorporates the former Business International Corporation, a U.S. recently reported that Tokyo and Osaka placed No. 1 and 2, respectively, as the most expensive places for expat executives to live. We can only hope that this doesn't prompt yet another wave of media reports about how cantaloupes in Japan sell for [yen] 10,000. Yes, some things, like the perfectly rounded and excessively packaged melon--or the cost of this magazine--are absurdly expensive here, but do Tokyo and Osaka really deserve to be called the two most expensive cities in the world? The Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU EIU Economist Intelligence Unit EIU Eastern Illinois University EIU Even If Used EIU Experimental Interaction Unit EIU Engine Interface Unit EIU Ethernet Interface Unit EIU Electronic Interface Unit EIU External Interface Unit ) report assumes that expats have the right to live in a foreign country in the very same manner as they would back home. Seems logical on the surface, and there likely are cases where a talented executive will only be persuaded to move his or her family on the condition that there be a 4-bedroom house with a 2-car garage on a quarter acre In Australian and New Zealand English, a Quarter Acre is a term for a suburban plot of land. Traditionally, Australians and New Zealanders aspire to own a 3- or 4-bedroom house or bungalow on a section of around a quarter of an acre (about 1,000 square meters), also known locally of land waiting for the family to call home. However, a few minor adjustments in lifestyle can produce such dramatic financial savings that even a habitual big-spender sometimes can't resist. One obvious example is the cost of taking a taxi from the airport to the city center (a measurement the EIU includes in its survey). While a taxi ride from Narita to downtown Tokyo costs around [yen] 18,000, airport buses and rail transportation are clean, frequent and run about [yen] 3,000. Or what about those car expenses in the EIU survey? Owning a car in Tokyo or Osaka clearly falls into the "convenience," not the "necessity" category. Even families with children probably need only one car. Cut out one or both cars and the resulting insurance, depreciation and maintenance costs will dramatically reduce a family's expenses. The decision to live within walking distance of a train station doesn't affect your ability to find a wide variety of living spaces, either. Japan's generally accepted corporate system of supplying employees with monthly train passes is another source of savings. The pass that takes you from your home in Kobe to your office near Osaka Station Ōsaka Station (大阪駅 Ōsaka eki) is a station on the West Japan Railway Company (JR West) located in the Umeda district in Kita-ku, Osaka, Japan. It is the city's main rail terminal in the north. , for example, gives you access to the 13 train stations in between--even when you're not headed to work. The EIU includes the prices of an international foreign daily newspaper, a local newspaper and a weekly Time magazine as three of the criteria in determining the cost of recreation in each city. Scrapping all three items and replacing them with the cost of broadband Internet See broadband. service, with its access to text, video and audio news from around the world, as well as its inexpensive international telephone service, would both increase the relevance of the survey and bring the cost of living in Japan more in line with reality. With service available from around [yen] 2,500 per month, Japan's broadband Internet service is among the least expensive in the world. A 3-minute telephone call from Japan to the US using a broadband provider is as low as [yen] 7.5. Finally, pity the Japanese chicken breast. While the rest of the bird--the liver, wings, legs and skin--make tasty yakitori ya·ki·to·ri n. A dish of bite-sized marinated chicken pieces grilled on skewers. [Japanese : yaki, roasting + tori, bird.] , the breast, with its relative dryness, is cast away as the part that is left over. Westerners who value skinless chicken breasts as a low-fat source of protein can find them at the grocery store often at prices lower than those in their home country. The chicken breast is a great example of the niche markets that expats can take advantage of. Need some 31 cm Nike shoes? Look around. Although the smaller sizes have sold out, you can probably find one extra large pair still unsold and on sale. According to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. the EIU survey, Tokyo and Osaka are 39 and 36 percent more expensive, respectively, than the base city, New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of . However, the next survey, due in June, may reflect some of the deflation deflation: see inflation. deflation Contraction in the volume of available money or credit that results in a general decline in prices. A less extreme condition is known as disinflation. currently digging into the Japanese economy. Mark McCracken is an Osaka-based freelance writer who makes a great margarita Margarita (märgärē`tä), island, 444 sq mi (1,150 sq km), in the Caribbean Sea off the coast of Venezuela. With many smaller islands it constitutes the Venezuelan state of Nueva Esparta (1990 pop. 263,748). . Otherwise, he lives frugally fru·gal adj. 1. Practicing or marked by economy, as in the expenditure of money or the use of material resources. See Synonyms at sparing. 2. Costing little; inexpensive: a frugal lunch. in Japan's second city. |
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