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Japan’s debts are shrinking. Its troubles may only be starting

Japan, a heavily indebted country, is not known for its fiscal hawks. Yet for a few weeks in May austere types were ascendant. As long-dated bond yields surged worldwide, the Japanese market wobbled and their warnings seemed prescient. After a dodgy auction revealed weak investor demand, 40-year yields reached 3.7%, a record, having started the year at 2.6%. Was a buyer’s strike afoot? Ishiba Shigeru, the prime minister, certainly seemed worried: “Our country’s fiscal situation is undoubtedly extremely poor, worse than Greece,” he told parliament on May 19th.

Russia on brink of recession, says economy minister

Japan is obsessed with rice. And prices have gone ballistic