Era of squatting in global public offices

TOKYO, July 15, 2024—Americans are feeling fatigue with Joe Biden digging is his heels to stay on for another 4 year term as the U.S. President for another terms. Yet he’s very junior when compare him with Vladimir Putin, who’s been the Russian president for 14 years since as far back as 2000, and Xi Jinping of China for 12 years since 2012.

But the longest serving head of state in the modern era is, as widely known, Nicolae Ceausescu, the Romanian president who was executed by firing squad together with his wife on the Christmas Day of 1989 after keeping the former communist country under his dictatorship for 15 years (Add up 9 more years as communist party top, he effectively reigned over the country for 24 years.)

We should not forget Hosni Mubarak, who ruled Egypt for 30 years until 2011, (Colonel) Muammar Gaddafi, the Lybian leader that kept an iron-fist tight grip of Libya for 32 years until 2011. Perhaps there were more dictators that ruled their countries longer than those post-WWII types.

Though undeniably shorter, Shinzo Abe of Japan served as prime minister over 15 years before he was gunned down.

Other Asian countries also are seeing longer tenures of heads of state. Cambodia’s Hun Sen has been prime minister on-and-off for 26 years since 1998. And don’t forget North Korea. The current leader, Kim Jong Un has been around for ‘only’ 13 years since 2011 and at age 40, expect a long and even more gripping reign.

In the Mideast, Syria’s Basha al-Assad has been ruling his country since 2000.

In Africa, Teodoro Obiang Nguema, 81, thrust himself to power in a 1979 Equatorial Guinea, keeping the presidency for 44 years of the country known as the African North Korea. Paul Biya, the world’s oldest elected leader, at 90 years, of Cameroon, has ruled the country for 41 years since 1982, despite allegations of election fraud.

Asian countries also are seeing longer tenures of heads of state. Cambodia’s Hun Sen has been prime minister on-and-off for 26 years since 1998.

In the Mideast, Syria’s Basha al-Assad has been ruling his country since 2000.

Even without doing math, one can tell that the longer the tenure of a head of state, the greater he/she (so far he) becomes an autocrat/dictator. The consequence is that those countries at a glance look strong and maybe even stable because of their leaders’ ruthless governance. No guarantee, however, the condition will continue long – as clearly proved by Romania’s Ceausescu, or the Philippines’ Ferdinand Marcos who was ousted in a 1986 coup.

The current world is flush with leaders that may be vulnerable to similar fates.

At the other end of the spectrum may be a shortening of tenures. In recent years, the leader who made herself known for staying in office the shortest in the country was Liz Trust who served as prime minister for 45 days in 2022. Japan’s Sosuke Uno might be known as second for having served 69 days in 1989 as prime minister. Both countries are known as island countries surrounded by sea, so the leaders’ fate might have been pre-destined.

The drawback or shortcoming of leaders’ short terms seem to reflect political impasse of their countries, which indeed was the case for Japan at the time and is so for the U.K. now.

This analogy seems to apply by and large the same to private entity organizations, including businesses. In Japan, CEOs are literally squatting on their posts of some leading companies – such as Akio Toyoda of Toyota Motor who has been in his post for 15 years, dangerously matching that of the late Shinzo Abe. Shinetsu Chemical, Oriental Land, Nihon Densan, and dozens of other leading companies also have long-serving CEOs in perhaps varying settings but in retrospect, many if not all cast shadows of potentially becoming zombies over the coming decades.

###

If true Japan can resurge to top of the world

TOKYO, April 29, 2024—All solid state batteries are a global game changer for addressing climate change, at the same time accommodating human mobility and comfy lifestyle. Japan dominates the number of relevant patent applications of this technology, accounting for 48.6 percent during the 2013-2021, The Japan Patent Office said in its April 25 report. If the technology becomes a reality with Japanese patents, Japan can dominate the world’s EVs, co-generation, and other applications for dramatically sustainable energy management and savings.

Will it happen? 

Following Japan were Korea’s 17.6 percent, the United States’ 12.9 percent, the European Union’s 11.9 percent, China’s 5.8 percent, Taiwan’s 1.2 percent, and Canada’s 1.0 percent.

Japan also ranked third in quantum computer patent applications after the United States and the EU, as well as a few other vital science and industrial tech applications, including zero emission housing, though it lagged woefully behind in drone and photovoltaic patents.

An official of the JPO Intellectual Property Trend Office said that the data was taken based on patent applications and public disclosure rules, so he could not tell trends post-2021 – when global automotive and other scientific and engineering experts accelerated all solid state battery R&D.

Toyota, Nissan and other Japanese companies are making interim announcements of their research progress. Chinese, Korean and and other businesses are announcing that they would launch cars and other products powered by all solid state batteries in as early as 2026. 

Which entity will be the top runner!?

###

Risks of over-dependence on behemoths

TOKYO, Dec. 1, 2023—Elon Musk is teaching us something important about size, dominance, and famous brand loyalty: Keep a friendly arms-length distance from behemoths and avoid over-dependence on them.

Musk Nov. 29, 2023 sad at a New York Times DealBook Summit, ‘Go xxxx yourself!,’ to one of the biggest advertisers of X, formerly Twitter, according to media reports, analyzing that X’s survival is being timed.

Whether Musk’s expletives reverberate to his Tesla, Space-X and other businesses is unknown but in light of the U.S. government’s over-dependence on the two companies, damage is likely to be limited. NASA relies extensively for launching space probes and rovers on Space-X rockets, the Pentagon needs Musk’s Starlink satellites, and the White House’s transport electrification program needs Tesla’s charging stations, which commands more than 60 percent of U.S. charging units.

So Musk is effectively the un-appointed top secretary of the While House, like Henry Kissinger was for Richard Nixon and other presidents, his businesses woven inexplicably and tightly in American politics to society.

That’s what Musk is telling us to rethink more loudly, thank you. Over coming years, lawmakers, businesses, and consumers may pause before making choices for befriending with behemoths that dominate everything, from politics, marketplaces and products. Some already learned the perils of over-dependence on a single supplier: Germany on Russia for natural gas and the United States on China for toys and a whole gamut of consumer products.

Apple’s iPhones are another product that dominates some smartphone markets, including the U.S. and Japan, where market shares are 56 percent and 46 percent, respectively, though the levels are not irreversible. In a highly competitive global auto market, Toyota Motor is not a dominant existence, except in Japan, where its share has always exceeded 50 percent, empowering it to be the retail price setter.

What happens when a single business controls nearly all of a marketplace, like Amazon’s cloud service in Japan with over 90 percent market share of public-sector cloud services? Competition disappears, and even though the Japanese government recently picked a small, obscure IT company for a government cloud service, whether it can continue for long is seen with skeptical eyes.

In such a setting, breaking up monopolies may be one of the first policy tools likely to be considered, as already being mulled by the Department of Justice regarding Google, Amazon and other big techs.

While shying away from the dominant force, Toyota’s position in Japan can be comparable to Musk. Not only CEOs of rival Japanese automakers, politicians and business executives look up to Akio Toyoda, the company’s chair, when commenting on industrial policies, clearly with the view that the Japanese industry is underpinned by Toyota’s prosperity and absent it, the Japanese economy would be at the bottom of the OECD ranking.

###lon