• 8 hours ago
ありえへん∞世界 2025年1月14日 成田&村上のニッポンの未来を考えまSHOW
#EnglishMovie #cdrama #drama #engsub #chinesedramaengsub #movieshortfull

Category

📺
TV
Transcript
00:00We have a special episode of URABAZA!
00:02We'll answer your questions and help you get rid of your frustration!
00:16This is how we do it!
00:20Before the show started, Mr. Bakuchi told us that he was nervous.
00:24Mr. Maru said he was going to give you a hug.
00:29How was it?
00:30Thank you very much!
00:31Thank you very much!
00:33I'm so sorry!
00:34Thank you so much!
00:36I can't accept that!
00:37I was so surprised!
00:38I'm so proud of you!
00:40Thank you very much!
00:41Nice to meet you!
00:43Ms. Emi Wakui seems to have some questions for Mr. Shimone Kamishirai.
00:52Mr. Shimone Kamishirai and I worked together on the drama.
00:57It was a very busy schedule.
00:59We had a lot of lines to say.
01:01We had a lot of things to do.
01:03We had a lot of time and space to do other things.
01:07But he was always smiling and doing a great job.
01:14When I saw him on the set, I wondered what was going on.
01:18Why are you speaking in Kansai dialect?
01:21I was so surprised.
01:23I thought it was impossible.
01:25So I watched it secretly from a distance.
01:29Don't you ever get sick of it?
01:32You get tired of it.
01:33You think you have to do it.
01:36I do.
01:39At home.
01:40I don't want to do it!
01:42You take care of your balance.
01:44I do.
01:45To keep my appearance.
01:48Please do it on the set.
01:51Can I do it?
01:53You can do it in front of Emi.
01:55Don't push yourself.
01:57I'll do it.
01:58You can't ask a senior to do it.
02:01Mr. Shimone Kamishirai had an incident during the shooting of the drama.
02:09During the shooting of the drama, I was so tired during the test.
02:16Of course.
02:18The person who was with me during the test had an interesting way of biting.
02:25I stopped when I was on the set.
02:27But when I was on the test, I had to go on.
02:31I had to go on for a while and I got a pimple.
02:34I see.
02:35I got a pimple.
02:36You still have it.
02:38I got a pimple.
02:40But I couldn't stop it.
02:42And it wasn't for me.
02:44It was for the other person.
02:45I couldn't get in the way.
02:47But it was so funny that I couldn't help it.
02:50I was shaking alone.
02:53Everyone was looking at me and they noticed I was laughing.
02:56I was shaking like this.
02:58Then I got a signal.
03:01Other actors started shaking.
03:03The cameraman was shaking, too.
03:06So, I stopped the test.
03:09And I didn't have much time on that day.
03:12So, I got a pimple on my face.
03:16I had to control my emotions.
03:21But I couldn't stop laughing.
03:25You were depressed.
03:27I was really depressed.
03:29You were depressed.
03:30I was so sad.
03:33I was so sad.
03:35Tonight, they will try a new secret technique to get rid of their depression.
03:42It's a secret technique that makes your pimple stick to your face when you have a fever.
03:51It's so beautiful.
03:52I didn't expect this.
03:54It's not funny at all.
03:56It's wonderful.
03:58It's not funny at all.
03:59Anyone can do it.
04:01Is that all?
04:02Yes, that's all.
04:03It's so beautiful.
04:04It feels so good.
04:07It's a secret technique that makes your pimple stick to your face when you have a fever.
04:17I was surprised.
04:19I'll go home and try it.
04:21I'm from Hokkaido.
04:23I'll spread the secret technique in Hokkaido.
04:26Really?
04:27That's a good idea.
04:31It's a secret technique that makes your pimple stick to your face when you have a fever.
04:39Really?
04:40It's not funny at all.
04:42It's not funny at all.
04:43It's true.
04:45It's spicy.
04:50It's not funny at all.
04:55It's not funny at all.
04:57I'm fine.
05:01It's so good.
05:06Let's think about the future of Narita and Murakami in Japan.
05:12Nice to meet you.
05:13Nice to meet you, too.
05:14Nice to meet you, too.
05:15Nice to meet you, too.
05:16A square and a circle.
05:17He wears a pair of glasses that are asymmetrical.
05:21He graduated from Tokyo University.
05:23Narita Yusuke is an economist who is in charge of data research.
05:29Murakami Shingo is interested in economics.
05:34Takami Kondo, the representative of the NEXIS group, participated in the competition.
05:47Mr. Kondo is the representative of the fashion leaders, a business association of 4,200 people.
05:59He is in charge of business matching of many small and medium-sized companies and entrepreneurs.
06:07What is the theme of this competition?
06:11What will happen to Japan if the wall of 1.3 million yen is demolished every year?
06:18It's a review of the 1.3 million yen wall raised by the National Democratic Party.
06:24When the annual income exceeds 1.3 million yen, income tax occurs.
06:30Students and freelancers tend to change jobs to stop working before tax occurs.
06:42In addition, the influence is also on parents.
06:46If the annual income of a child is less than 1.3 million yen, it is treated as an unnecessary family.
06:53In order to reduce the economic burden of raising a family, the income tax and housing tax of parents are reduced.
07:03However, if the annual income of a child exceeds 1.3 million yen, it is excluded from the unnecessary family, and the tax on parents increases and the income is reduced.
07:15By raising the wall of 1.3 million yen to 1.78 million yen, many people can work and eliminate the shortage of people.
07:28By purchasing with increased income, the effect of turning the economy is also expected.
07:35In addition, if the wall of 1.3 million yen is demolished and raised to 1.78 million yen, the part where the tax is applied will be reduced, and many Japanese will be subject to tax evasion and increase in income.
07:52People with an annual income of 2 million yen may receive 86,000 yen per annum.
07:58People with an annual income of 10 million yen may receive 228,000 yen per annum.
08:07However, the Ministry of Finance announced that it would reduce the income by about 8 trillion yen, including the country and the region.
08:14Various discussions are being held on how to reduce the income of the people with an annual income.
08:21I agree with the demolition of the wall of 1.3 million yen.
08:26Because I think it will simply improve the mood.
08:30The atmosphere is dark.
08:33I think it's a very good thing to improve the mood, so I think it's better to do it if they smile.
08:40Why did you start this?
08:43In short, the Nationalist Party wants to increase labor.
08:47It's like a pledge to the previous election.
08:51Why did you say you wanted to increase labor?
08:55For example, in the past few years, Japanese companies have clearly improved their business performance.
09:02That's why I'm talking about raising wages.
09:06At the same time, the number of national taxes is increasing.
09:12The government is asking private companies to raise wages.
09:17Wages are going up, but there are parts that don't make it in time.
09:22On the one hand, only household expenses are increasing due to inflation.
09:27The number of disposable earnings is decreasing.
09:31Private companies are distributing it, but the government is not doing anything.
09:37In other words, it's a policy to get back the tax you've taken too much.
09:44The average annual income of private companies has increased by about 400,000 yen in 9 years.
09:51In 2023, it will be the highest ever, 4.6 million yen.
09:58However, due to the recent inflation, the number of private companies is increasing.
10:04The increase in private companies is exceeding the increase in annual income.
10:09The amount of money that can be used freely has not increased.
10:14On the other hand, the number of national taxes continues to increase.
10:18In 2023, it will be the highest ever, about 72 trillion yen.
10:23In other words, there is a sense of sluggishness.
10:28As a citizen, I have been dissatisfied for the past two years.
10:33It seems that Japan is growing, but why is our life not getting any better?
10:40What is important here is to help the only household that distributes among the country, companies, and households.
10:49The wall of 1.3 million yen is trying to solve this problem.
10:54But this problem will eventually be solved.
10:57Because the rent is increasing and the actual rent is increasing.
11:04So it will be solved, but it will take time.
11:08There is still a time lag, so we are trying to solve it.
11:13When I was young, my part-time job was about 500 yen per hour.
11:18I worked for about 12 hours, so I had a salary of about 160,000 yen.
11:22I don't work now, I work for 8 hours.
11:24So the total salary hasn't changed much.
11:27But the hourly wage has increased by about twice.
11:29But the company is not getting any better.
11:31When I go to a hotel in Tokyo, I feel like it has doubled or tripled due to COVID-19.
11:37Even in a business hotel, tens of thousands of yen.
11:40When I used to buy a house, it was like an auction.
11:45At least in Tokyo, it's almost like an auction.
11:49Yes, Tokyo's business hotel stayed for about 10,000 yen before COVID-19.
11:56Now it's about 20,000 yen and doubled.
12:01In addition, the average price of a new residential apartment in Tokyo in 2023 is 1,14,830,000 yen.
12:13From 2022, 39.4% has increased in just one year.
12:22It's a dream home that ordinary salarymen can't reach.
12:30That's a tough life for everyone.
12:33And the biggest problem in Japan is that consumption hasn't increased.
12:37The reason why consumption hasn't increased is because people don't get a lot of household expenses.
12:42So the main problem is that it's not getting richer, but it's getting poorer.
12:48At the household level.
12:50As a countermeasure to that, it is said that it is important to increase labor, to pay subsidies, and to save money.
12:56I think this is a fake solution.
13:00What do you mean?
13:02I think we should change the 1.3 billion yen wall.
13:06If we change it, we'll have to pay 8 trillion yen.
13:09That's the maximum.
13:11But in Japan, the total national income is close to 700 trillion yen.
13:14That means it's only about 1% of the total national income.
13:19On the other hand, inflation is increasing by a few percent every year.
13:23So if we do the so-called large-scale taxation, it's only a matter of a year's inflation to blow it all up.
13:31So the fundamental problem is how to create a situation where the power that Japanese people earn can be increased every year.
13:41If we can't do that, no matter how much we tax and pay subsidies, it won't be a real solution.
13:48Yes, even if we remove the 1.3 billion yen wall and raise it to 1.78 billion yen,
13:56the tax rate will be about 110,000 yen a year for people who earn 3 million yen a year.
14:04Mr. Narita says that if the inflation goes ahead, it won't be enough to deal with the price increase.
14:14In addition, Mr. Kondo says that the Labor Standards Act, which restricts working hours, is deeply related to the fact that Japanese people are not getting enough work.
14:29But it's easier than that.
14:32I think it's best to say that those who want to work harder can work harder.
14:37If you think about it that way, it's a law that people who want to work hard can't work hard.
14:42Don't work any more.
14:44So that's a big problem.
14:46If you want to work hard, you should work hard.
14:49The company has the Labor Standards Act, so it employs twice as many people.
14:54Then the income will be halved, and productivity will be divided into two.
15:00So in the end, you can't make money.
15:02I think it's more important to make money than the tax rate.
15:08What should I do for that?
15:10I think it depends on the job, but I think it depends on how many hours this country has to work.
15:17So that you can make money, you have to pay a lot of salaries to employees.
15:22If you say, give me a salary that doesn't let me work, it's a contradiction.
15:26If you look at it from overseas, it doesn't look like Japanese people are working.
15:30If you say the amount of work, it's less than half of OECD.
15:35That's right. Japanese people should realize this.
15:38In fact, the average working time for Japanese people is 22 out of 34 countries, including three OECD countries.
15:48About 190 hours a year than the United States of America.
15:54About 260 hours a year less than neighboring Korea.
15:59If you look at it globally, you can't say that the working hours are long.
16:05Also, there are 16 days of holidays a year. This is the most common in G7.
16:12In the past, I was told that I was a working bird.
16:16You can work 24 hours a day.
16:18It's the world of re-gain.
16:20No one knows about the commercial for re-gain.
16:22If it was broadcast, it would probably be banned in three seconds.
16:25No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
16:26It's the power to make money.
16:29If the sales don't go up, the company won't make a profit.
16:35In that sense, Japanese people should be aware of the power to make money.
16:41I think it's important.
16:43It's extremely important.
16:45But demand is also important.
16:47Since the corporate economy has improved, last year's bonus was the highest in history.
16:54The average hourly wage of Tosho Prime is rising to the right.
17:01Last year, it recorded a record high of about 840,000 yen.
17:09That's because the companies are making a lot of money.
17:14At least some of the companies are rising as the center.
17:19But 99.7% of the companies in the world are small and medium-sized companies.
17:21Yes, yes, yes.
17:23Small and medium-sized companies are also rising.
17:27If they don't, people won't get together.
17:30So we can't stop this trend.
17:33I've seen a lot of small and medium-sized companies.
17:36Small and medium-sized companies are still...
17:3899.7% of them are small and medium-sized companies.
17:41It looks like a good thing because the majority of them are small and medium-sized companies.
17:45But for small and medium-sized companies, they have to raise their salaries.
17:48I think it's a big deal.
17:51I think so, too.
17:53But behind the 1.3 million yen wall, there's a lot of change in policy.
17:57For example, there was a story about small and medium-sized companies.
18:00Small and medium-sized companies' salaries don't go up easily.
18:02The big reason for that is that big companies are more powerful.
18:06For example, small and medium-sized companies in the supply chain can't raise their prices.
18:12If you raise the price, you'll be threatened to stop trading.
18:15Small and medium-sized companies can't do that.
18:18Small and medium-sized companies need to protect small and medium-sized companies.
18:21There are a lot of important policies.
18:23It's very important.
18:25If the number of small and medium-sized companies increases, the economy will be affected.
18:29But what's really important is to make the economy grow.
18:33Especially for small and medium-sized companies and people who don't have a lot of salary.
18:37It's more important to create an economy that increases the number of small and medium-sized companies.
18:41It's more important to create an economy that increases the number of small and medium-sized companies.
18:44It's the same for freelancers.
18:47If you want to work, you want to work.
18:49But you have to make it easier for small and medium-sized companies to work.
18:55You have to be able to face big companies.
18:59If you don't recognize that it's easy to work in this environment,
19:03it's hard for people who want to work to work.
19:06It's like the word small and medium-sized companies got a citizenship for a while.
19:12It's all about small and medium-sized companies.
19:14It's all about small and medium-sized companies.
19:16The unemployment rate is so low.
19:19I think we need to change the governance of small and medium-sized companies.
19:27The more people work, the more they benefit.
19:31That's right.
19:33There are so many different ways to work.
19:38You can find a place to work without looking at the job description on your smartphone.
19:44That's right.
19:46Companies that can't adapt to it will be eliminated.
19:51People won't get together.
19:53That's right.
19:55It's hard to find a way to make money, but you're all worried about it.
19:58That's right.
20:00What should we do to make money?
20:05Mr. Kondo says there is a problem with the way employees and managers think.
20:12In the old days, there was a saying in Japan,
20:16The real meaning of that saying is,
20:29For example, a bonus.
20:31But now, the word bonus is English, so it's natural to get it.
20:35I think it's a good thing to give out a lot of money.
20:40But it's actually a profit-reducing fund.
20:42I think it's better to say it in Japanese.
20:45Everyone benefits.
20:47Everyone distributes it.
20:49Let's make a lot of money together.
20:51That's a strange way of thinking.
20:55That's right.
20:57You can't get a bonus.
20:59You can't make money.
21:01That's right.
21:03There's a bad thing about companies.
21:06The bad thing about companies is that the managers don't let employees see the numbers.
21:10That's right.
21:12It's a pattern for this.
21:14We have to put it out.
21:16I've been putting it all out before I started.
21:18I'm making so much money.
21:20That's why we're all trying to do this.
21:23Everyone is aware of the numbers.
21:26It's not cheap and expensive.
21:28If this succeeds, I'll give you this much.
21:31I'm telling you to hide this and do your best.
21:34It's impossible.
21:36It's all a secret.
21:37Are you going to unify the numbers?
21:39That's right.
21:41I'm sure there are a lot of companies like that.
21:43Why are there so many companies that can't see the numbers?
21:47I don't feel like this company belongs to everyone.
21:52We're all doing our best.
21:55We're all using the time of our lives to live our lives.
21:59I can only say that the strength of my feelings is low.
22:04I think all the money I've made is mine.
22:07And the other thing is...
22:10If I say something negative,
22:13I'm afraid I'll quit.
22:16But if I don't say that, I'll lose without fighting.
22:20When COVID-19 came, I thought it was a big deal.
22:23It's a big deal, but it's a big deal.
22:26But if this happens, it will succeed.
22:29I have to say that we should all do our best.
22:32I'm going to do this quietly.
22:33I think it's okay if everyone around me doesn't do their best.
22:37If you don't say that and say,
22:40I'm doing my best, but why don't you guys do anything?
22:43What are you talking about?
22:45I don't know what's going on.
22:47I think the role of a leader is to make the numbers clear,
22:51make them visible, and talk about their vision.
22:54It's a communication.
22:56The difference between companies that have the power to make money and those that don't is huge.
23:00Especially when you're making something that sells outside of Japan.
23:05The market is different.
23:08Including import and export.
23:10In the first place, Japan and the United States are in a world where the prices are several times different.
23:15Even if you sell the same amount of the same thing,
23:18the sales are several times different depending on whether you sell it in Japan or overseas.
23:22That's why companies like Uniqlo may be able to raise their salaries.
23:25That's right.
23:27It's tough to fight in a world where imports and exports are getting higher and higher.
23:33That's right.
23:35But in the end, it's the manager's responsibility not to make money.
23:38There's nothing we can do about that.
23:41There are a lot of zombie companies in Japan.
23:45Especially in Japan, there are a lot of subsidies,
23:49and there are a lot of policies that allow you to borrow money with almost zero interest rate.
23:52So even if you don't have a stable business, you can still maintain the company.
23:57And the more difficult the industry is, the more people will go bankrupt.
24:02So I think there is a side effect that the system is easy to make to save those people.
24:07That's true.
24:09That's why things disappear and new things come out.
24:12That's the principle of competition.
24:15Especially when people are running out of money,
24:17even if it hurts a little,
24:20it's natural to create a new company so that people can move to a new industry.
24:26That's what happens naturally.
24:29That's why people are starting to increase.
24:32That's not necessarily a bad thing for the economy.
24:35If you look at it from a point of view, it's going to change.
24:39I'm going to be naked, but I'm going to meet a lot of managers, so I'm going to be naked.
24:43The CEO of a successful company is doing his best.
24:47That's easy to understand.
24:50Even if you're not successful, there are a lot of people who think you're not doing your best.
24:56I didn't count the numbers.
24:59People who are working hard succeed.
25:02Motivation doesn't come from people.
25:05If a hard-working person listens to a hard-working song, he'll say,
25:08Let's do it!
25:11If a hard-working person listens to a hard-working song, he'll say,
25:14Shut up!
25:17Motivation can be given to people, but the source is yourself.
25:21Even if you don't have a lot of money, you can find a way.
25:28Everyone, please do your best.
25:30If you want to do it, make it yourself.

Recommended