(1) Jason Clenfield, What's Good for Toyota Isn't Always Good for Japan.
http://www.businessweek.com/arti ... than-a-devalued-yen
("a stock market and real estate crash [following the 1989 crest] erased $15 trillion in wealth. * * * The collapse of Japan’s bubble wiped out the equivalent of three years of GDP, compared with one year in the 1929 US crash, notes [Richard] Koo[, chief economist at Nomura Research Institute in Tokyo]. 'Many who lived through the Great Depression never borrowed again,' he says")
Note:
(a) summary underneath the title in print: Yen depreciation helps big exporters but won't do much for the little guy
(b) Masao NAMIKI, chairman of Namiki Kanagata Ltd, in Tokyo's Ota industrial district
(i) 並木 正夫 / 株式会社 並木 金型
* Namiki 並木
* name 並; 並み 【なみ】: (n): "set of (eg teeth)"
* kanakata 金型 【かながた】 (n): "metal pattern; die; (metal) mold"
* kane/kana 金 【かね(P); かな(金)(ok)】 (n): "(1) (See お金) money; (2) metal"
* kata 型 【かた】 (n): (1) "model; type (e.g. of machine, goods, etc)"
(ii) Ōta, Tokyo 東京都 大田区
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C5%8Cta,_Tokyo
(c) Fast Retailing
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fast_Retailing
(founded in 1963 by Tadashi YANAI 柳井 正; in 1984 "opened a new casual-wear store named Unique Clothing Warehouse in Hiroshima City; this was the forebear of Uniqlo")
(d) Shin-Etsu Chemical 信越化学 工業株式会社
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shin-Etsu_Chemical
(“Shin-Etsu” in the company's name derives from Shin'etsu Region 信越地方, where the company established the first chemical plant in 1926)
(i) 信越地方
http://ja.wikipedia.org/wiki/%E4%BF%A1%E8%B6%8A%E5%9C%B0%E6%96%B9
(ii) Chihiro KANAGAWA (社長) 金川 千尋 (a man)
* Chihiro
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chihiro
* hiro 尋 【ひろ】 (n): "fathom"
* chihiro 千尋 【ちひろ】 (n): "(1) great depth; bottomless; (2) great height <一歩誤るとせんじんの谷だ。 One step further, and you will fall into an abyss>"
* fathom
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fathom
(two yards (6 feet); Originally based on the distance between a man's outstretched arms)
* fathom (n; from Old English fæthm outstretched arms, length of the outstretched arms; First Known Use before 12th century)
http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/fathom
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