abount osaka

Since the end of the Showa era, Osaka has been a city of little change.
In the past, when talking about cities in Japan, Osaka often came up alongside Tokyo. The first intercity highways, high-speed trains and Shinkansen are open between Tokyo and Osaka. At that time, it was a major artery for the flow of people and goods between the two cities.
Compared to other regional centers, it feels shabby, but what is the reason?
After the bubble burst in the latter half of the 1990s, companies with dual headquarters in Osaka and Tokyo gradually left Osaka. Unlike the regional center cities, the Osaka office no longer functions as a office too, and in other words, it seems that it is no longer necessary to function as a branch office in consideration of the situation around the Kinki region. It is as if the office has disappeared from Osaka. Employees of large companies in Osaka moved to Tokyo, and new graduate students from Osaka had no choice but to go to Tokyo for employment. Despite the fact that there are still many excellent universities in the Kinki region. While the average income in Osaka will inevitably fall, the population will also age. The city has lost its youth. Politicians only respond “in this situation”. Foreigners, most of them seem to have no choice but to rely on Chinese tourists.
Osaka was a city run by the private sector, and the government relied on the tax money to do nothing useful, but only paid high salaries. , In order to break it down, it seems that the interests have been taken away by a strange political party that claims reform, efficiency, drastic reform, overthrow of vested interests, etc. They don’t realize that the underlying structure has to change. Along with that, Tokyo has become terrifyingly bloated, an outrageous metropolis, and overflowing with people.

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