Title: The ¥70 Million Trap: Japanese Students Get "Debt," While Foreign Elders Get "Instant Benefits."

Welcome back to the underground bunker of Bakuro-cho. To the 147 intellectual souls who have drifted here: today, we shall dissect the beautiful "system of extortion" embedded within our national pension and nursing care insurance. The youth of Japan are in a miserable position. Even as students with no income, they are mandated to pay into the national pension. If they cannot pay, they aren't "exempted"; they are granted a "deferment"—a polite word for a debt that must be repaid later. This is the heavy "annual tribute" required to exist in this country. Meanwhile, there are those who plunge their hands into this "Japanese piggy bank" without ever having contributed a single yen, receiving benefits as if they had been paying all along. ■ The Shocking Number: ¥70 Million per Retiree Let us look at the cold, hard figures based on public data (Investigation: Gemini Pro). The total social security benefits (pension, medical, and nursing care) that a single Japanese person receives from retirement at age 65 until death is approximately ¥70 million (approx. $460,000 USD) on average. Of course, Japanese citizens have been paying premiums for 40 years of their working lives. This ¥70 million is sustained by their past savings and the contributions of the current working generation. Here is the problem. ■ A "Humanitarian" Ticket for a Free Ride Under current Japanese regulations for "Specified Skilled Workers" and "Highly Professionally Skilled" visas, foreigners can eventually bring their grandparents or parents to Japan under "humanitarian considerations" once they achieve permanent residency status (Investigation: Gemini Pro). These elderly family members arrive with zero history of contribution (no premiums paid) to the Japanese system. Yet, from the day they arrive, they gain the right to receive high-cost medical and nursing care—a slice of that "¥70 million" pie—as if they had been contributing for decades.
■ The Absurdity of the "Latecomer Advantage" While Japanese students are burdened with debt under the name of "deferment," elderly relatives from abroad are provided with advanced medical and nursing care at the same 10% to 30% copay as citizens, regardless of their past contribution records. It is the equivalent of a homeowner being sidelined while a late-arriving guest distributes the contents of the homeowner's safe. Why is such a nonsensical system left untouched? Because there are those who "profit immensely" from this very system. In the next post, I will expose the identity of the "True Overlords" and their alchemy of exploitation. (To be continued in Part 2)

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

■ The "Hidden" Data: The Magic of Exclusion

[Illustrated] The Giant Trap of "90% Vaccine Efficacy" – The Statistical Trick the Media Will Never Report

Episode 14: The Birth of the "Secret Treasury" — Why the Pension System was Actually Created in Japan