How Japan has Changed for Foreigners
Japan has really changed for the better over the past decade and a half in terms of how easy it is for a gaijin to live here. When I arrived in Heisei 3, the third year of the reign of Emperor Akihito (i.e. 1991), it was quite difficult to find a bit of "home" -- when I'd get homesick, I'd go and eat Egg McMuffins at McDonald's, just about the only thing that was exactly the same as it was back in the States. Slowly, Japan opened up and let just about any product in, and now consumers have a lot more choice, from Doritos to Subway sandwich shops to AM/PM Mini Marts. The Internet has obviously helped improve the lives of foreigners living here, allowing expats like me to do things they could never do before, like buy books from Amazon or log into a SlingBox and catch the Superbowl live. There's been one setback for Americans living outside their home country, however: last year the United States Post Office stopped offering surface mail service for packages going out of the U.S., meaning that my mother can't throw some Thanksgiving goodies into a seamail box and send them to me. It's been quite an inconvenience -- now she has to send the items by airmail or else call shipping companies like Yamato for container shipping quotes. (Note that seamail shipping into the U.S. is still going strong, and you can choose it as an option when purchasing from J-List as long as you're not in a hurry for the items.)




4 Comments:
I can't say I like many of the changes the US Postal Service has done here in the US. It used to be one charge for any envelope under 1 oz, and an additional charge for additional ounces. Easy, and made it so you could stick appropriate stamps on it and drop in the mailbox.
Now they hit you not just for weight, but also for dimensions. Too think - added charge. Too long in either direction - another added charge. Ratio of height to width off - added charge.
The one that really got me is that some of my Xmas cards (cards in envelopes) were considered too small - so were hit with an added charge!?!
And for all this, they are raising the rates again in May (after raising them last May).
Sorry about the rant...
4:36 AM
It's pretty bad. Although when you send a stamp for 37 cents or whatever it is these days, remember that it's 80 yen, about 75 cents, in Japan, for a domestic letter. So not everything is bad ^_^
11:02 AM
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1:18 AM
Working for a shipping company strategically partnered with the major carriers, I feel your pain. The US Postal service has altered their ability to announce changes down to 90 days in advance. This will now result in a yearly rate change in May, similar to the package carriers in January.
1:19 AM
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