All the below links and tweets are in English.
取り急ぎ以下貼っておきます。
World Vol.190 AUKUS、アフガニスタン、Good Friday Agreement、エネルギー・資源、Evergrande(中国)など
World Vol.189 (incl European Union)
World Vol.187 (U.S. economy, etc.)
World Vol.182 (U.S. – ISM, oil, Hurricane Ida)
World Vol.180 (Jackson Hole economic policy symposium)
World Vol.179 (U.S. incl Jackson Hole)
内容例(各回ツイートもご覧ください)
以下、順に、
190:@CSIS,@ntsafos、@ChathamHouse,@GloCoBank、@ForeignPolicy2枚、@instituteforgov、@AJEnglish,@AJLabs、@LMdiplo,@Cecilecarto
189:@Bruegel_org,@nfPoitiers
187:@bespokeinvest、@IBDinvestors,@IBD_MGalgani
182:@wbkotv、@LexKYEM、@OGJOnline
180:@AEI,@TheHill
Japan及びEurope等を入力、検索して出て来たツイート(若干古いもの等含む)
Yesterday, I had the great honor to speak about EU & US consumer policy and the platform economy at a conference organized by the Japanese Consumer Affairs Agency: https://t.co/N9hXlUgRrA (in English with Japanese subtitles, starting at 1:30 h) #DSA #DigitalServicesAct #DMA pic.twitter.com/XwregfXcLi
— Christoph Busch (@christophbusch) July 6, 2021
"Activity Inching Back in European Economies"
Some could say that activity is stabilizing at lower level.#US #Japan #Germany #France #Italy #Spain #UK #Canada #Norway #Sweden #economyhttps://t.co/L0l3ZfHiGq pic.twitter.com/h7LdUHPrk0
— GnS Economics (@GnSEconomics) February 15, 2021
#Hungary is the first #European country to return to the #Japanese #market.#Hungarian #economy #money #pork #meat #trade #dailynewshungary
– https://t.co/Enew5p0siJ— Daily News Hungary (@DNewsHungary) January 31, 2021
https://twitter.com/nicktolhurst/status/1369588549029421064
https://twitter.com/tradegovuk/status/1321183395116888065
Is the European economy at risk of “Japanification”? $GS Research explains the lessons investors can learn from Japan’s history to better understand Europe’s future: https://t.co/XtN29uWm7O pic.twitter.com/o6q18WYM2n
— Goldman Sachs (@GoldmanSachs) January 5, 2020
This is the worst nightmare for index investors… the Nikkei has not recovered from its highs in over 30 years.
Japan in the late 80s was no different from where US is today but was likely in better shape. (my view) pic.twitter.com/LTXZHqaWJF
— Alok Jain ⚡ (@WeekendInvestng) October 2, 2021
China’s Olympic Bubble Will be a Vacuum Packed Seal.
« It will be 10 times harder than Tokyo »
via @NYTimes https://t.co/yYJ6z8jfmG
— tariq panja (@tariqpanja) August 9, 2021
Left part of the chart shows the real economy prices growth such as US wages, house prices, EU wages, US inflation, EU inflation or commodities since 2009. Right part shows the S&P 500, high yield EU and US bonds, world, EU and Japanese stocks, gold and others.
INFLATION? WHERE? pic.twitter.com/G3elFW6RND
— Sebastian Sienkiewicz (@Amdalleq) February 9, 2020
https://twitter.com/TrendsharksLive/status/1239489963504340993
https://twitter.com/uk_sf_writer/status/1311190149225738240
Japan is the top destination for EU-produced #COVID19 vaccines, new data shows.
No country has imported more doses from the bloc since Brussels started monitoring exports. pic.twitter.com/hVwwggVSjb
— DW Europe (@dw_europe) April 29, 2021
Tokyo 2020: Why some people want the rising sun flag banned https://t.co/jjr2cYiH94
— BBC News (World) (@BBCWorld) January 3, 2020
"We have to help young people, those who want a family life and are dreaming about children" – Russian President Vladimir Putin https://t.co/cVy1UwsTlD
— BBC News (World) (@BBCWorld) January 15, 2020
Gas crisis leaves Europe searching for solutions https://t.co/EGoPRuCjG1
— BBC News (World) (@BBCWorld) September 23, 2021
Japan urges Europe to speak out against China’s military expansion https://t.co/p19EdqpD90
— The Guardian (@guardian) September 20, 2021
New research connects a 12th century volcano eruption in Japan to years of famine in Europe https://t.co/nPFJQjafqB
— Daily Mail Online (@MailOnline) June 24, 2020
China lays claim to the entire Galwan Valley on Himalayan border where Chinese and Indian troops fought deadly midnight brawl https://t.co/7wq8mIdQQ3
— Daily Mail Online (@MailOnline) June 20, 2020
Germany will build a new hospital for 1,000 coronavirus patients https://t.co/SYflrVdlJz
— Daily Mail Online (@MailOnline) March 18, 2020
Dominic Raab accuses China of 'industrial scale' abuses against Uighurs https://t.co/b30xgclHhk
— Daily Mail Online (@MailOnline) February 22, 2021
Muslims slaughter cattle, camels and sheep in bloody sacrifice to celebrate Eid al-Adha https://t.co/wdN74xbrVD
— Daily Mail Online (@MailOnline) August 2, 2020
These rapid delivery firms, backed by billions of dollars of venture capital from Europe, the United States, China and Japan, are using electric bikes and scooters to deliver groceries https://t.co/l3z8wUx1w7 pic.twitter.com/oh33lgtK26
— Reuters (@Reuters) May 20, 2021
A unit of Japan's Toshiba said it had been hacked in Europe by the DarkSide ransomware group widely believed to have been behind a crippling fuel pipeline attack in the United States this week https://t.co/YtsGXVEsMy pic.twitter.com/1x8JZFnqcV
— Reuters (@Reuters) May 14, 2021
Analysis: U.S. sanctions on Russia will send a signal, if not deter https://t.co/oVVFocGgXZ pic.twitter.com/SSJekJm8QZ
— Reuters (@Reuters) March 22, 2021
The company could already be responsible for as much as 2% of global #bitcoin mining.
BitRiver hosts equipment at its 100-megawatt data centre for foreign miners of the cryptocurrency from the U.S., Europe and Japan who want to harness the region’s cheap energy 2/5 pic.twitter.com/dMIyT8XcoO
— Reuters (@Reuters) March 9, 2021
Export powerhouses Japan and South Korea suffered the sharpest declines in business activity in more than a decade, while there were signs of recovery in Europe, surveys showed https://t.co/rUgDa0KmYi pic.twitter.com/LZ0DvrX7DN
— Reuters (@Reuters) June 1, 2020
Amid rising talk of negative rates, policies in Japan, Europe get subtle tweaks https://t.co/DjFKJASNal pic.twitter.com/8FD5QgbTDW
— Reuters (@Reuters) May 19, 2020
Nissan will focus on the U.S., China and Japan and will pull back from Europe and other regions, people with direct knowledge of the plan told @Reuters https://t.co/CoBXd8QAzp pic.twitter.com/WX3RcK3ndj
— Reuters (@Reuters) May 4, 2020
Japan to ban U.S., China, Europe travelers as coronavirus spread stokes Tokyo lockdown fears https://t.co/eq6X5BPVZT pic.twitter.com/cUmXzsOJGu
— Reuters (@Reuters) March 30, 2020
Business activity collapsed from Australia, Japan and Western Europe to the United States at a record pace in March as measures to contain the coronavirus pandemic hammer the world economy https://t.co/Gxow2MnAFS pic.twitter.com/nPThb1GtTP
— Reuters (@Reuters) March 24, 2020
Italy is under a total lockdown, but a post showcases the Games’ official mascots, Miraitowa and Someity, conducting a jaunty video tour of Europe. The day Japan ordered schools closed for weeks, the account tweeted rhapsodic praises of spring flowers https://t.co/xZNPMKCPFb pic.twitter.com/zAEhEHEgbO
— Reuters (@Reuters) March 13, 2020
Europe’s share markets suffered their biggest slump since mid-2016, as a jump in coronavirus cases in Italy, South Korea, Japan and Iran sent investors scrambling to the security of gold and government bonds https://t.co/mgNPQUQiFY pic.twitter.com/CPFxyLd04A
— Reuters (@Reuters) February 24, 2020
WATCH: NASA rover data shows Mars had the ingredients needed for life. Find out more: https://t.co/r24kA9jPHc pic.twitter.com/J2mtgDGRm6
— Reuters (@Reuters) June 14, 2018
Carlos Ghosn also said he was “the object of a character assassination campaign” in Japan, where he’s accused of financial misconduct. The former auto magnate spoke to @AP before he faces French judges investigating alleged financial wrongdoing in Europe. https://t.co/Ob4Ii56sLa pic.twitter.com/i9KmFiifbX
— The Associated Press (@AP) May 26, 2021
BREAKING: U.S. stocks tumble following a sell-off in Europe and Japan as the coronavirus outbreak grows. The Dow Jones Industrial Average drops 500 points in early trading as travel company stocks sink. https://t.co/Dq6hBmBXkn
— The Associated Press (@AP) January 27, 2020
Chancellor Angela Merkel wants Germany to rapidly boost its charging stations for electric cars and will talk with auto executives on protecting jobs during the switchover. https://t.co/ClrrWhsmll
— AP Europe (@AP_Europe) November 3, 2019
Compared to Europe and Asia, the USA's approach to transportation infrastructure is pitiful. I lived in Japan for four years. Not once was a train late. Not once was there an accident. They transport 100 times more people by train than we do without an issue. Pitiful.
— ScottBourne (@scottbourne) September 26, 2021
As chip shortages disrupted the production of automobiles and other products, the U.S., China, Europe and Japan have all sought to expand their own domestic production capabilities https://t.co/2m8VQJqpzP
— Bloomberg Economics (@economics) July 15, 2021
Central banks in the U.S., Europe and Japan have become ultimate market whales during the pandemic, with combined assets of $24 trillion (via @MalcolmScott8) https://t.co/3bOOW3OnTI
— Bloomberg Economics (@economics) July 8, 2021
Central banks in the U.S., Europe and Japan have been on a record $9 trillion pandemic binge. Here's how all that spending stacks up https://t.co/N9jPq6G13J pic.twitter.com/D7JELbOXmK
— Bloomberg Economics (@economics) July 8, 2021
Biden promised to go big on infrastructure. The $105 billion North Atlantic Rail project, a high-speed train line between Boston and New York City, definitely fits that bill (via @citylab) https://t.co/gMkmyxCFVe
— Bloomberg Economics (@economics) February 21, 2021
#DailyDataPoint: Alternative data show economic activity crashes – particularly in Europe – as the virus resurges (via @RoyeBjorn & @TomOrlik) https://t.co/CSqmZ0QXmM pic.twitter.com/DClGZODOPf
— Bloomberg Economics (@economics) November 13, 2020
The Fed’s decision to slash leaves policy makers in Europe and Japan under more pressure from investors to follow suit even though they have less scope to do so (via @Skolimowski, @_DavidGoodman & @DEBaltaji ) https://t.co/Wagp7vOH5H
— Bloomberg Economics (@economics) March 3, 2020
U.S., Europe and Japan agree to push for stronger World Trade Organization rules against market-distorting government aid https://t.co/I6JCXOkVaR
— Bloomberg Economics (@economics) January 14, 2020
Looser monetary policy in the U.S., Europe, and Japan has been instrumental in beating back expectations of a more pronounced economic slowdown (via @PeterCoy) https://t.co/xYyujhZs2K pic.twitter.com/N5f9G3PR8d
— Bloomberg Economics (@economics) November 21, 2019
"The European economy is in a very bad state," says @marcusashworth on @BloombergTV. "They're keeping a very close eye on the euro-dollar rate, because if the euro rises now, it's going to put all of Europe into proper recession." https://t.co/dBLHe6tYer pic.twitter.com/2rbEULM1Kn
— Bloomberg Economics (@economics) July 11, 2019
Europe's sclerotic growth and political dysfunction are reminiscent of Japan's lost decade https://t.co/ho9xxzurGM
— Bloomberg Economics (@economics) April 8, 2019
There are reasons to think the Fed's strategy of overshooting 2% inflation won't work:
1. Aging population
2. Technology
3. Experience of Japan & Europe
4. Inflation expectations below 2%
5. Globalization (if still in place)https://t.co/x2RhSso9li via @economics @chrisjcondon pic.twitter.com/FXmnDHcGgP— Steve Matthews (@SteveMatthews12) August 28, 2020
"Longer-term inflation expectations were, when the downturn began, at the low end of a range that I consider consistent with our 2% inflation objective and are at risk of falling below that range."
–Richard Clarida, Fed vice chairman https://t.co/Oe5K6wo5zM via @economics— Steve Matthews (@SteveMatthews12) June 17, 2020
The Japanese economy shrank less than the U.S. and European economies did in the April-June quarter, but it fared worse than Asian counterparts https://t.co/bMaQIE0GCI
— The Wall Street Journal (@WSJ) August 17, 2020
The S&P 500 nearly tripled in the 2010s, Japan’s major stock index more than doubled and Europe's jumped by 64%. Fast-growing China? Its Shanghai Composite actually fell. https://t.co/0PtlNJ9ZdP
— The Wall Street Journal (@WSJ) January 5, 2020
Fresh economic data in Europe and Japan suggest the rebound may be smaller than hoped for https://t.co/2yn6HcnR2C
— The Wall Street Journal (@WSJ) August 21, 2020
Business activity in Europe and Japan collapsed in April as governments tightened restrictions on movement and social interaction, according to surveys https://t.co/z9MefglgRd
— The Wall Street Journal (@WSJ) April 23, 2020
Japan tests immigration policy. “It would be a disaster if we ended up with the same problems as the U.S. and Europe.” https://t.co/b4zgDsfot6
— The Wall Street Journal (@WSJ) September 11, 2019
“We are one recession away from joining Europe and Japan in the monetary black hole.” How low interest rates and slow growth could trap the U.S. economy. https://t.co/tN6lULJv4k
— The Wall Street Journal (@WSJ) January 15, 2020
Is Europe turning into another Japan, fated to decades of sluggish growth and high debt? https://t.co/56nKmk3xP9
— The Wall Street Journal (@WSJ) December 29, 2019
Covid-19 cases in the U.S. and Europe are surging, while life in South Korea, China and Japan is returning to normal. Here’s how countries in East Asia have kept the virus in check. #WSJWhatsNow pic.twitter.com/bMVO2Jm2FP
— The Wall Street Journal (@WSJ) November 5, 2020
China has the world’s second-largest arms manufacturing industry, ranking behind the U.S. in sales but outstripping Russia and the top European nations, a new report says https://t.co/OgGHNmBUqM
— The Wall Street Journal (@WSJ) December 7, 2020
From @WSJopinion: President Biden’s "infrastructure" bill is really a plan to remake the U.S. economy by banishing fossil fuels https://t.co/l7Qz5aCHzh
— The Wall Street Journal (@WSJ) April 13, 2021
Breaking: Two Americans held hostage by Iran-backed Houthis in Yemen were freed in exchange for more than 200 militants, U.S. and Saudi officials said https://t.co/RYdkGn1Gx1
— The Wall Street Journal (@WSJ) October 14, 2020
Business activity in Europe and Japan collapsed in April as governments tightened restrictions on movement and social interaction, according to surveys of purchasing managers https://t.co/OOIjftymXX via @WSJ pic.twitter.com/evqKGgaxKe
— WSJ Graphics (@WSJGraphics) April 23, 2020
Opinion: How China can end the covid-19 conspiracy theories before they get worse https://t.co/3aIVIEyy5u
— The Washington Post (@washingtonpost) April 24, 2020
As Trump announces tariffs, Trudeau unveils Canada’s new trade deal with Asia https://t.co/LkmorqooNc
— The Washington Post (@washingtonpost) January 23, 2018
South Korea asks Olympic officials to ban Japan’s Rising Sun flag at Tokyo Games https://t.co/qVn3F1GBRV
— The Washington Post (@washingtonpost) September 11, 2019
"… although IRs on long dated Treasury securities are low by US historical standards, they’re high compared to yields on government bonds in Japan and Europe" in "LT borrowing for infrastructure could be a great deal for taxpayers" via @washingtonpost https://t.co/5tsbMyBDun
— Michael E. Drew (@MichaelEDrew) July 1, 2021
Pres. Biden wants to bring Amtrak to a Northeast commuter corridor. Its future is uncertain.https://t.co/dO53CU4QjB
— NBC News (@NBCNews) June 21, 2021
As of July 5, at 10:15 a.m. ET, there have been 2,855,330 confirmed COVID-19 cases in the US and 130,699 reported deaths, according to an NBC News tally. https://t.co/qv6iQrU6Rb pic.twitter.com/VuKz4fu6jw
— NBC News (@NBCNews) July 5, 2020
JUST IN: 1.3 million people filed for first-time unemployment last week, marking 17 straight weeks of job losses in the millions. https://t.co/8ctGogNwrv
— NBC News (@NBCNews) July 16, 2020
Hiroshima survivor says "eliminating nuclear weapons is the path to peace," 75 years after atomic bombing https://t.co/qXVw0G7gQS
— CBS News (@CBSNews) August 6, 2020
Biden minimum wage proposal could lift more than 1 million workers out of poverty https://t.co/GyTmhkRoYz
— CBS News (@CBSNews) January 16, 2021
WATCH: Pres. Biden is celebrating 50 years of Amtrak service. Biden earned a reputation for frequently riding the rail system from Delaware to Washington, D.C. while a senator and vice president, inspiring the moniker "Amtrak Joe." https://t.co/MHbOroxEvI https://t.co/3UD4mXS7p4
— CBS News (@CBSNews) April 30, 2021
Video captures the moment the Union Pacific train charges out from a snowy backdrop, creating an amazing "Polar Express" moment. https://t.co/5vuX8qbz6W pic.twitter.com/dnPykJY2a4
— ABC News (@ABC) November 24, 2019
Even as he earned the president’s praise, Pence is careful never to assume credit directly and consistently attributes anything positive to the president’s decision-making prowess. https://t.co/PAc9IKrFpE
— ABC News (@ABC) April 11, 2020
A lonely Japanese billionaire is seeking a "life partner" who can accompany him on his upcoming trip to the moon. https://t.co/Ir01JMzy7y
— ABC News (@ABC) January 14, 2020
The world’s second-largest #economy is still receiving financial aid from its competitors, including the United States, Japan, some European countries, and others.https://t.co/IBivvgohI7
— NTD News (@news_ntd) June 16, 2021
@Swamy39 @ShekharGupta @SiddiquiMaha Economist Paul Krugman in NewYorkTimes on “China Bubble Economy”.Krugman feels China wl meet its Bubble Moment like Japan,Europe&USA.@MaliniP @Mahatma_Kodiyar Wonking Out: This Might Be China’s ‘Babaru’ Moment https://t.co/aeZ3XnFOXg #Modi
— Dr Pentapati Pullarao (@PentapatiPullar) September 26, 2021
Evergrande has now missed a deadline to make an $83 million payment to foreign investors, raising questions about what would happen if its $300 billion debt load went sour
'via @nytimes' https://t.co/qRZ4CvKpAh
— Forbes India (@forbes_india) September 27, 2021
An abrupt default on a number of debts by Evergrade “would be a useful catalyst for market discipline, but could also sour both domestic and foreign investor sentiment,” Professor Eswar Prasad (@EswarSPrasad) tells The New York Times (@nytimes). https://t.co/9C3noQOBF6
— Cornell Dyson (@CornellDyson) September 28, 2021
Evergrande's success mirrored China's transformation from an agrarian economy to one that embraced capitalism. The property giant's struggles expose the flaws of the country's financial system — unrestrained borrowing, expansion and corruption. https://t.co/WDhRflatk9
— The New York Times (@nytimes) September 28, 2021