At the end of the 1980s, the growth of the Japanese economy reached its peak.
Executive golf courses, luxury brand shops, resort hotels were always fully booked. The taxis didn’t stop unless you showed a wad of 10,000 yen notes and waved it to the drivers.
However, the bubble economy collapsed. If you think things are expensive in Japan, it’s a hallucination of that period.
The actual cost in Japan
The price in Japan depends on the place, things are very expensive in Tokyo, as you can guess, but it’s not the same in the countryside. Overall, I could say, it is a little cheaper than some countries in Europe or North America.
For example, the cheapest hotel room costs 2,000-5,000 yen in most cities, a bed in the dorm will be 1,000 yen at the cheapest. At restaurants, you can have decent lunch for 800-1,000 yen, or you can get a beautiful lunch box for 500 yen in convenience stores.
Labour cost is not expensive in Japan
One of the reasons why it’s not expensive in Japan is a cheap labour cost, in my opinion. Compare with other countries, Japanese labour cost is not high at all. In 2021, Japan raised the minimum wage to 930 yen (=8.05 USD) per hour in average.
Another thing is that you are not expected to pay chips. Chips are not common in Japan.
What does earning money mean for Japanese
It may sound funny to you, but I think, some people are not very enthusiastic to make money in Japan. They don’t really like talking about money. Some of them think earning money is greedy, and even feel guilty to charge you for their labour or service.
Good news is most Japanese people are honest. It is extremely rare to get ripped off.
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