Jump to content
SAU Community

cost of living in japan....please help.


Recommended Posts

Frank, also remembered starting this year Bonus is applicable to pension contribution.

Companies commonly gave lower monthly salaries to escape hugh Pension contribution, but this year the J-Govt got smart and made Bonus applicable to the Pension scheme. It's a killer...a percentage of a hugh lump sum is alot of money :)...nobody is happy about that.

edit: good point by Scriby, but commonly overlooked...for all you know you may absolutely hate it over here. I know heaps of guys who couldn't wait to leave after their contract ended...they were kinda in an internship. Make sure you have a clause to allow you to get the fark out (breaking the contract with no consequences) when you feel you can't hack the pressure no more.

Here's a report from today, basically the young is contributing to the pension scheme which supports the elderly. Many of the young people now already feel when they become old the next generation will not be able to support, thus there will be no pension support for them in 35 years time.

I have been here long enough to see this is already the case for those retiring in 15-20 years as they take more and more out of my pay pack. As the article says this is the current debate in Parliment to see what changes will be made to the current Pension policy. Unlike Australia we are being made to save, if you don't save for your own retirement...tough!

One in five Japanese aged 65 or older -- report

08 Jun 2004 05:10:04 GMT

TOKYO, June 8 (Reuters) - Nearly one in five Japanese is aged 65 or older and the figure will jump to one in four over the next decade or so, reflecting the country's rapidly ageing population, a Japanese government report released on Tuesday showed.

The report underscores the challenges Japan's low birthrate and lengthy lifespan pose for the nation's creaking pension system, a topic of heated political debate ahead of an election in July.

There were 24.31 million Japanese citizens aged 65 or older as of last October, 19 percent of the population, according to the report released by the Cabinet Office. Japan's population totalled 127.62 million as of October 1, 2003.

The number of men aged 65 or older stood at 10.26 million, surpassing the 10 million mark for the first time, it said.

The report warned that the number of people aged 65 or older would continue to grow quickly, accounting for 26 percent of the population in 2015 and 35.7 percent in 2050.

The number of Japanese aged 100 or older had doubled in the five years since 1998, topping 20,000 in late September, the report added.

Japan has the world's highest life expectancy, at 78.07 years for men and 84.93 for women.

According to some estimates, Japan will have roughly one person over 65 for every two of working age by 2025, a higher dependency ratio than any other major industrialised country.

The rapid ageing of society and a tumbling birthrate have raised concerns that young people paying into the state pension system will receive severely reduced benefits when they retire.

Japan's parliament on Saturday enacted a pension reform law that will raise premiums and cut benefits, despite a raucous struggle by the opposition -- who favour more sweeping reforms -- to kill the legislation.

Pension policy looks set to be a hot topic in elections for parliament's Upper House, expected on July 11.

http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/T170411.htm

i think im paying around 7% income tax.... students always complain that they are paying around 20% or something...

Yeah I could be out of date, those were the figures I calculated ages ago. These days I don't know what the hell they take out...all I know is a couple of grand disappears before I see anything :rant:

i pay around 67 or 76 thousand yen per month for rent.. but i guarantee the other japanese residents in my building arent paying that much......

That's very true, the Japanese are famous for jacking the price up for Gaijin, when I was living up in northern Japan the usual price increase over a Japanese was an additional 20,000-30,000 Yen. Down here in Yokohama I'm paying 169,000 Yen a month in rent on a new three bedroom house. Cheap housing can be had though if you look around, of course you usually get what you pay for though. My employer reimburses me the money I pay for rent so I wasn't overly concerned with finding a cheap place to live, rather I found the nicest place I could for the maximum price they would reimburse me for.

As far as food if you know where to shop you can get by quite cheaply, my wife is an extreme penny pincher and knows when everything is going to be on sale at whichever markets. Buying certain fruits and vegetables out of season is a big no-no.

Transportation for me is pretty simple since I'm only about 5 km's from work, the screwed up thing is that it takes me 5-10 minutes to drive there in the morning(leave at 5:30am) and about 20-30 minutes to get home depending on what time I leave work. I should probably just ride a bike but I'm too lazy, that and I'm a late riser. When I was living in Yokohama the first time(got here in '95) I'd either take the bus or sometimes use the train, either way it came out to around 700 Yen for a round trip since I really didn't live too far away.

What made me come over here? no choice really. I joined the US Navy in '94 and got stationed in Japan in Jan '95, hated it at first but then I met my wife and decided to stay. I spent my first four years in Yokohama and then I moved up by Aomori in northern Japan, I just moved back to the Yokohama area a little over a year ago. I'll probably be leaving here in '06 or '07, not by choice however.

 Down here in Yokohama I'm paying 169,000 Yen a month in rent on a new three bedroom house.  

eek.gif Damn that's expensive! eek.gif

And I thought my 50,000 yen a month was steep :D (for 7 room house, 3 room out building, 2 car garage, garden and driveway parking for 3 or 4 cars :D ) Of course, the downside being the house is as old as I am and the neighbourhood consists of elderly Kei truck driving farmers :D

I'm still in the Navy, it's a good stable job and I have a family I need to support. That and it's given me the chance to stay in Japan for so long :)

Yeah my rents pretty damn expensive, we love our house though. Our neighbourhood consists mainly of old people as well and a few young couples, we've done our best to try and get away from all the other Gaijin in the area. I wish I had a garage :) ah well at least I have my own driveway, some people don't even have that.

Go away Dave you can't be considered, your a Hill Billy :(

OK my place ain't big 2DK but relatively new less then 10 years and 20mins train from town. Rent is less then what I use to pay for my bachelor pad in North Sydney 35,500Yen/month subsidised. In fact I was paying half that till earlier this year with my misses who has gone backed to Aust...who bloody pays $222/month on an apartment in Japan :(.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • Given it is temporary, I bought a  cheapy gauge mount (which has become enflattened) which I will screw into the existing phone mount Also a first for me; given this is a temporary install I could not think of any reason not to use one of those "add a fuse" thingies to source the battery and IGN power. I had always figured they were pretty dodgy but having a good look at them I think they are a valid option for sourcing power from an existing source without cutting 
    • Finally for now, a bit more work on the transmission temp gauge. I was wondering how Raceworks do a gauge for $100 that autometer want $500 for. No idea about the accuracy of course, but they have cut a few corners that made things hard.  First one I mentioned above, the sender is physically difficult to fit and doesn't work with their own adapters (the extra fittings I used to get the sender into a hose cost more than the whole gauge, lucky I had stuff in the shed) Second, the temp sender wires are way too short. They are shown as 2.7m on the box and I know my routing was long from navigator headlight to driver's firewall back to centre console, but I had to lengthen them by about 2m total - 2 joins in each wire. Also, same with the supplied power loom, they needed about an extra 1m to get the fuse box where I sourced power. Another join in each wire since one end wasn't supplied terminated. I know they could argue that the wires might be long enough depending on situation, but when you consider parts and particularly labour, it would be a very expensive cheap gauge if you can't do the work yourself. And, only a small issue....but it would have been nice if they remembered to tap a tread onto *both* spacers they supplied for the bracket....I haven't had to use the M4 tap often!
    • If it does get a turbo it would blow the JCW Mini out of the water considering how "close" some of the tests were. Then again the Mini would probably get one of them Stage 69 tunes.
    • Next up, the extinguisher is mounted but really only temporary because I ran into clearance problems (the bracket fit fine....until I put an extinguisher on it). It picks up the seat bolt mounts but has long bolts running through 20mm spacers for now Doing it properly requires a bit of quick welding but I ran out of time, this will do for the practice day  
    • Family events weekend but a snuck a couple of things in. NSW state champs were down at Wakefield so I got Gordon Leven's to bring some A052s down in the right size for some spare rims I had that "fit" (actually ex-Leaf Nismo.Rays in 18x7.5). Tyres are 235/45/18 so they are narrower than stock (19x8.5s) but I need to keep road tyres on it for daily use for now. In a first, those weird size tyres had been in the yoko warehouse for so long (4.5 years apparently) that they offered 4 for the price of 2....so 4 practice tyres for about $1100. Bit of a bargain for sticker tyres, considering the real purpose of the practice day is mostly to see how the various temps go (and the weather is due to help, forecast 32o). In terms of race wheels, it looks like I should be able to fit 9.5 fronts and 10.5 rears but 18 vs 19 height will be based on what tyres I can get in the right size - good tyres are very limited in available widths in diameters above 17" so some planning is needed. Once I'm sure this car will work I'll order a set of custom BC wheels like I did for the R32, you can get exactly the right width and offset to make the most of the available space in the wheel well (the 32 has 295s all round on 18x10s and they are awesome) Incidentally A052 are asymmetrical but not directional which is good news for rally use if the front and rear wheel sizes are different because I can swap them side to side on the same axle. Directional tyres are a nightmare with staggered size wheels because each tyre is fixed on that corner unless you can get it rotated on the rim (not really practical mid rally in most cases)
×
×
  • Create New...