How a Culture Changes with the Value of Money
by Peter C. Earle
For roughly two decades following the collapse of its late-1980s asset bubble, Japan became the world’s defining example of a low-inflation and periodically deflationary economy. My recent travels through Tokyo, Nagano, and several other regions brought into unusually sharp relief how much of that era still lingers in everyday economic life. From the late 1990s through much of the 2000s and early 2010s, consumer price inflation frequently hovered near zero and often fell below it altogether. Inflation rates of -0.5% to -1% were not unusual, and even outside outright deflationary periods, the country’s broader price environment remained extraordinarily subdued. The phrase “lost decades” entered the economic lexicon precisely because Japan appeared trapped in a persistent equilibrium of weak nominal growth, subdued demand, cautious investment, and chronically low inflation expectations.
That era, at least mechanically, has largely ended. Inflation accelerated sharply after 2021, reaching levels that would once have seemed extraordinary by Japanese standards. Consumer inflation rose to roughly 2.5% in 2022 and exceeded 3% in 2023, reaching the highest levels seen in decades. At points during 2022, inflation briefly approached 4%, a striking development in a country that had spent years struggling merely to push prices modestly upward. Inflation moderated somewhat thereafter, fluctuating closer to the 2% range, roughly in line with the long-sought target of the Bank of Japan. Tokyo core CPI readings were near 2% in early 2026, and national inflation readings modestly below that suggest that Japan has, in statistical terms, exited the deflationary regime that defined much of its modern economic history.
Yet walking through neighborhoods in Tokyo, Nagano, or Yokohama today, one senses almost immediately that something deeper persists beneath the headline inflation figures. The visible legacy of Japan’s deflationary era is not merely statistical; it is behavioral, institutional, and cultural. The country has exited deflation in the data, but not entirely in the expectations and habits formed during twenty years of near-zero inflation.
That distinction matters because deflation is not simply a number printed in a CPI release. Over time, persistent low inflation reshapes how firms price products, how workers negotiate wages, how households consume, how investors allocate capital, and even how societies think about risk, value, and stability. We make our money in the obvious sense: governments issue it, central banks manage it, banks multiply it, firms price in it, and households earn and spend it. But over time our money also makes us. The monetary environment trains behavior. It teaches people whether to borrow or save, whether to spend now or wait, whether to invest aggressively or preserve liquidity, whether to view price increases as normal or as a breach of trust. Japan’s experience demonstrates that once those behavioral equilibria become deeply embedded, they do not disappear simply because inflation rises for several years.
It is also worth saying something that is often missed in Western commentary: deflation did not wreck Japan in the cartoonish way often implied. Japan did not become a failed state, nor did its cities decay into poverty. The country remained orderly, wealthy, technologically sophisticated, safe, and extraordinarily functional. Its citizens continued to enjoy high life expectancy, excellent infrastructure, superb transportation, clean cities, world-class manufacturing, and dense networks of retail and service quality. The problem with deflation was not that it produced instant collapse. The problem was subtler: it imposed a long, quiet drag on risk-taking, nominal growth, wage bargaining, asset turnover, and entrepreneurial dynamism. It did not destroy Japan. It disciplined Japan into caution.
Price Rigidity, Wages, and the Social Legacy of Deflation
The clearest evidence appears in price-setting behavior itself. Japanese firms remain unusually cautious about raising prices even after several years of above-target inflation. In many cases, price increases are framed indirectly or apologetically: “renewals,” “limited-time adjustments,” reduced portion sizes, or subtle quality downgrades rather than explicit price hikes. Walking through Shinjuku or Ginza, menus still cluster around psychologically familiar thresholds (500 yen, 1000 yen, 1500 yen) even where input costs have clearly risen. Convenience stores display remarkably narrow pricing bands for prepared foods and beverages, while vending machines across major cities maintain strikingly uniform price structures despite changing costs.
These patterns are not anecdotal curiosities. They reflect decades of conditioning in which firms learned that raising prices risked losing customers in a chronically weak-demand environment. In an economy where consumers became accustomed to flat or falling prices, businesses competed increasingly through service quality, packaging, reliability, and incremental product refinement rather than through pricing power. The result was a deeply entrenched form of price rigidity that has proven remarkably durable even after inflation returned.
That kind of rigidity is often treated as inefficient, and in many respects it is. It compresses margins, discourages expansion, and makes it harder for firms to respond flexibly to rising costs. But it also produces a distinctive consumer experience: stable prices, intense service competition, high reliability, and a cultural expectation that value should be protected. Japan’s deflationary inheritance therefore has two faces. Economically, it weakened nominal dynamism. Socially, it reinforced habits of thrift, precision, durability, and service quality. That is part of what makes Japan so fascinating: the same regime that frustrated macroeconomists also produced, at the micro level, a remarkable culture of value.
The same legacy appears in labor markets and wage dynamics. Japan has recently experienced somewhat stronger wage growth than in prior years, but the increases remain modest relative to what one would expect in a genuinely inflationary environment. Firms still prefer bonuses, temporary allowances, or one-time adjustments over aggressive permanent increases in base pay. The underlying mindset forged during the deflationary era—labor as a fixed cost to be tightly controlled—remains influential. Workers likewise continue to prioritize security and stability over aggressive wage bargaining, reflecting a labor culture shaped by decades of subdued nominal growth.
This disconnect is visible throughout the service economy. One of the striking features of urban Japan remains the extraordinarily high level of service embedded in relatively inexpensive transactions. Convenience stores are heavily staffed. Retail packaging is meticulous. Restaurants maintain attentive service standards at price points that would often appear economically unsustainable in many Western cities. The density of labor input relative to final pricing quietly illustrates how wage growth lagged behind broader cost pressures for years.
Household behavior reflects similar dynamics. Japanese consumers remain highly price-sensitive, savings-oriented, and cautious in their spending patterns. Even in affluent districts, consumption often feels measured and restrained rather than exuberant. Smaller basket purchases, frequent shopping trips, careful product comparisons, and persistent demand for discounts all reflect habits formed in a world where waiting often meant lower prices tomorrow. Cash usage also remains relatively high by developed-world standards, reinforcing the broader preference for liquidity and stability over leverage and aggressive consumption.
This is where the idea that money makes us becomes especially important. In an inflationary culture, households learn that money loses value if held too long. Debt becomes less frightening, because future repayment may occur in cheaper currency. Asset ownership becomes a defensive strategy. Price increases become expected, even routine. In a deflationary or near-zero inflation culture, the opposite habits develop. Cash feels safe. Debt feels heavy. Waiting feels prudent. Bargaining feels rational. Stability becomes not merely an economic condition, but a moral and psychological preference. Japan’s monetary regime helped form a citizen-consumer who was careful, patient, and skeptical of price increases.
Real Interest Rates and the Deflationary Equilibrium
The persistence of these behaviors is closely tied to the real interest-rate environment that defined Japan for decades. Japan’s defining macroeconomic condition was not merely low inflation, but the persistence of positive real interest rates despite near-zero nominal policy rates. For years, the Bank of Japan pushed nominal rates effectively to zero—and eventually below zero—in an attempt to stimulate borrowing, spending, and investment. Yet because inflation remained negative or barely positive, real borrowing costs often remained meaningfully above zero.
If nominal rates are zero but inflation is -1%, then the real interest rate is effectively +1 %. In that environment, holding cash becomes rational because purchasing power is preserved or even enhanced over time. Borrowing, by contrast, becomes relatively unattractive because debts do not erode meaningfully through inflation. The practical effect was that monetary policy, while appearing extraordinarily accommodative on paper, often felt tighter in lived economic reality.
This helps explain several of the defining characteristics of corporate Japan during the post-bubble era. Firms accumulated enormous cash reserves and remained comparatively under-levered relative to their American counterparts. Investment projects were evaluated conservatively. Capital expenditure tended toward incrementalism rather than aggressive expansion. Liquidity was hoarded, balance-sheet resilience was prioritized, and corporate survival often took precedence over maximizing growth or return on equity.
Again, this was not irrational. It was adaptation. Firms learned from the environment in which they operated. In a world of weak nominal growth, unstable asset values, aging demographics, and uncertain demand, cash was not dead money. It was insurance. Low leverage was not necessarily timidity. It was protection against a world in which growth assumptions repeatedly disappointed. The very traits outsiders often criticize in corporate Japan—excess cash, low return on equity, slow restructuring, consensus-driven decision-making—were in part institutional responses to a long monetary and macroeconomic regime.
The real-estate sector also absorbed this psychology. Unlike in the United States, where property ownership is often associated with assumptions of perpetual appreciation, Japanese real estate outside prime urban corridors frequently came to be viewed as a depreciating or at-best stable asset. Older buildings remained in active use for decades, and outside the largest redevelopment zones, much of the built environment reflected continuity rather than speculative churn. Structures were maintained, adapted, and reused rather than rapidly demolished and replaced. This too reflected the broader collapse of inflationary and speculative expectations following the bursting of Japan’s asset bubble in the early 1990s.
Even now, after inflation has returned, expectations remain only partially adjusted. By conventional arithmetic, real interest rates in Japan today are low or even negative because inflation has risen while nominal policy rates remain comparatively subdued. In theory, such conditions should discourage cash hoarding, stimulate investment, and encourage more aggressive pricing behavior. Yet behavior has not fully followed the arithmetic because expectations have not fully changed.
This is perhaps the most important point in understanding Japan’s current transition. Measured real rates may now be low or negative, but perceived real rates, the rates that actually govern behavior, remain psychologically higher because firms and households still do not fully believe inflation will persist. If businesses expect inflation to fall back toward zero, then committing to aggressive wage increases or major long-term investments still appears risky. If households expect future price stability, precautionary saving remains rational. In this sense, the deflationary equilibrium survives primarily through expectations and habits rather than through current price trends themselves.
Inflation Has Returned, But the Psychology Has Not Fully Changed
This distinction also explains why Japan’s recent inflation episode differs from many Western inflationary episodes. In countries with deeply embedded inflation expectations, firms tend to pass through rising costs aggressively and workers demand higher wages quickly. Japan’s response has been far more cautious. For years, yen weakness failed to translate cleanly into domestic inflation because firms absorbed cost increases internally rather than fully passing them on to consumers. That pass-through has increased more recently, but even that change has occurred gradually and reluctantly.
Importantly, none of this means that Japan remains trapped in deflation in a strict economic sense. Inflation is positive. Policy rates have finally begun moving away from emergency-era lows. The country exited negative interest rates in 2024, an institutional acknowledgment that the long deflationary emergency had eased. Broadly speaking, the outright deflation regime has been broken.
But the mechanisms forged during that period remain partially intact. If the deflationary equilibrium had fully disappeared, one would expect stronger wage acceleration, more aggressive price pass-through, lower corporate cash balances, faster credit expansion, and more robust consumption responses. Some of those developments are beginning to emerge, but not decisively or uniformly.
Japan today therefore occupies an unusual and historically important position. It is no longer truly a deflationary economy, yet neither has it fully transitioned into a conventional inflationary equilibrium. Instead, it exists in an intermediate state in which inflation has returned faster than expectations, institutions, and social behavior have adjusted.
Walking through Japanese cities today, this tension is visible everywhere. Prices are rising, but often cautiously. Firms are adjusting, but incrementally. Consumers are spending, but carefully. Inflation exists, yet the collective psychology of stable or falling prices remains deeply embedded. The result is an economy that appears, at least superficially, more inflationary than it often feels.
Japan’s experience ultimately demonstrates that inflation and deflation are not merely monetary phenomena; they are social and behavioral regimes. Central banks can alter nominal policy rates quickly. They can expand balance sheets aggressively. They can attempt to engineer higher inflation. But expectations, particularly after decades of reinforcement, move much more slowly. That reality becomes particularly striking when observed directly in the rhythms of daily commerce, pricing, retail behavior, and household consumption across modern Japan.
The lesson is not that deflation does not generate trade-offs. Nor, by any means, that inflation is preferable simply because it slides the general price level upward. The deeper lesson is that monetary regimes shape economic character. They form habits. They reward certain behaviors and punish others. Over time, people internalize those rewards and punishments. They do not merely transact in money; they learn from it.
That is why the most accurate description of Japan today is not that it remains in deflation, but that it continues to live with the behavioral residue of deflation. The country has exited deflation statistically. It has not yet fully exited it psychologically. Inflation has returned, middlingly, but the economy has not yet fully transitioned into the type of inflationary bias evident in the US and many Western economies. The deflationary regime is no longer dominant in the data, but it remains partially alive in the habits of firms, workers, households, and investors. And that becomes difficult to miss when moving through Japanese stores, restaurants, train stations, and neighborhoods, where the habits formed during decades of near-zero inflation still quietly shape economic behavior; a silent but salient reminder that we make our money, but over time, our money also makes us.
Peter C. Earle, Ph.D, is the Director of Economics and Economic Freedom and a Senior Research Fellow who joined AIER in 2018. He holds a Ph.D in Economics from l’Universite d’Angers, an MA in Applied Economics from American University, an MBA (Finance), and a BS in Engineering from the United States Military Academy at West Point.
