There is a general guiding principle for boycotting Japanese goods: taking national interests as the starting point. We can introduce as many high-tech aspects as we can related to military, energy, environmental protection, precision processing, precision management and other high-tech aspects. These technologies are the national foundation on which Japan relies for its survival and are also where it leads the world. They are worthy of our careful study and summary. To deal with Japan, we must use soft knives to kill people. Japan has despised and looked down on China since the Qing Dynasty. That is exactly why we should humbly learn from their strengths and secretly quickly expand our own strength.
Many netizens believe that there are many Japanese components in domestic products. Should we boycott them? No matter how hard you try, you can't resist it. Yes, I admit that. But boycotting Japanese products should be about finding alternatives wherever possible. For example, if you want to buy cosmetics from Shiseido, you can switch to the domestic Herborist, Zheng Mingming, or Avon. For example, if you want to buy a TV set from Toshiba or Sony, you can change it to a domestic one such as Hisense, Skyworth, or Changhong, which are also good in quality. White household appliances such as air conditioners, refrigerators and washing machines must be purchased in China. As for digital cameras, camcorders, etc., if domestic products do not meet your requirements, there is nothing wrong with choosing Japanese products. This is your freedom. Therefore, the principle of boycotting Japanese goods is to buy non-Japanese goods as much as possible, rather than beating them to death with a stick. Boycotting Japanese goods does not mean that you should smash all the Japanese appliances or other things in your home. It just means that from now on, you should not do any more. There are no absolutes in the world when it comes to buying Japanese brands. But I think, as a Chinese, we have the responsibility to do something for the future of this country and the future of our children and grandchildren to ensure their future security.
Some netizens raised questions: We boycott Japanese goods, and Japan also boycotts Chinese goods. Aren’t we also suffering losses? Aren’t we both losing? Don't worry, friends. The goods Japan exports to our country are all high-end luxury goods such as cars and electrical appliances. We can buy our own or European and American products, or even use them. What are we exporting to them? Rice, coal, wood, vegetable oil, soybeans and other daily necessities. Even the garlic and green onions that the Japanese eat are produced in Northeast my country. Let them boycott. If they don’t import our own, they don’t have enough or even don’t have enough. Import it from other countries, the shipping cost will scare him to death! They can't stop eating and burning coal, right? They have no choice! Therefore, patriotic netizens, please feel free to boycott Japanese goods boldly. We will definitely not be the ones who fail.
Will China's economy suffer heavy losses from the boycott of Japanese goods? The answer is no!
In this world, life will continue regardless of who leaves whom. The key depends on who is against whom. Greater dependence? Although boycotting Japanese goods may also affect my country's economic development, it is an unbearable pain for Japan. If we impose a rare earth embargo on Japan, Japan will not be able to bear it. The Japanese ambassador to China convened the ambassadors of the United States, Britain, Germany, France, South Korea and other countries on the 12th to ask China to relax its export regulations on rare earth elements. Niwa said that all countries should coordinate their steps and unanimously ask China to relax its export restrictions on rare earth elements. To solve the problem of rare earth element exports, united diplomatic pressure from all countries is necessary. Why are you only allowed to ban the sale of weapons and not us to ban the sale of rare earths? Joint pressure? Unfortunately, China is not afraid of the Eight-Nation Alliance!
Resources are limited, and the overall market is also limited. China exports to Japan The products are mainly source products mainly energy and mineral products. The products exported from Japan to China are downstream products mainly home appliances, automobiles and machinery. Although the added value of source products is low, most of them are limited. And source products are less likely to be saturated. For example, the price of iron ore increased this year. Although China is the largest buyer and has tried its best, it still increased by more than ten percentage points. This is the reason. As a source product, there are too many digestion channels. In the divestment incident, who loses more? Investors. China exports source products, while Japan exports downstream products. It goes without saying who relies on whom more.
Comparatively speaking, if China's products are not exported to Japan, it is more likely to find other buyers (agricultural products are more difficult, mineral products are easier), but Japan will pay a high price if it does not buy China's source products. Just think about it. You can find out by traveling thousands of kilometers around most of China's maritime territories in search of new alternatives.
Japanese investment has brought us benefits, but the boycott of Japanese goods has nothing to do with Japanese investment. Boycotting Japanese goods has a quantitative and time-consuming process, and it will not happen overnight. Given the gentle and kind-hearted character of our people, even if the boycott of Japanese goods goes to the extreme, only half of our compatriots will participate (which ranges from those who are conditionally willing to buy Japanese goods). What's more, the growth rate of Sino-Japanese trade has been around 30% in recent years. In other words, boycotting Japanese goods only moderately suppresses the Japanese economy. Therefore, there is no problem of reducing taxes and increasing unemployment by boycotting Japanese goods. Even if Chinese consumers boycott Japanese goods, China is still the most profitable place for Japanese companies to invest, and they will not divest. While we are boycotting Japanese goods, Japanese businessmen will continue to invest, but their attitude will change and they will become polite rather than condescending; they will become fearful rather than dictating; they will become humble and restrained rather than wanton and arrogant.