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There is a vending machine for every 23 people in Japan.
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That's the highest vending machine per capita on the planet.
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After the business card fiasco, I started to become keenly aware of all the vending machines that I saw here in Japan.
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I noticed, they are everywhere!
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Indeed, what we're looking at here is a Japanese institution.
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Behind me sits an entire shop dedicated to chopsticks.
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Yes, I'm about to go inside.
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The first thing you have to know in order to understand the vending machines, is that Japan is an aging country.
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The average age here is 46 years old, which is almost double the world average.
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And the fertility rate is 1.4 which means the population is actually shrinking.
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This is actually a looming crisis for Japan generally, but one of the effects of it is that the labor market is very expensive.
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There's a scarcity of low-skilled labor.
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So, instead of paying a sales clerk to sit and collect your money when you buy a piece of gum.
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They just put it in a machine and automate the whole thing.
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And the same goes for real estate.
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Japan is one of the densest countries in the world.
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93 percent of the population lives in cities.
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People literally live in an apartment smaller than your SUV.
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So instead of paying a lot of money for a store front, retailers will just slip a little machine into an alleyway to save a lot of money and they can still turn a really good profit.
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According to one essay that I read from a Japanese economist here in Tokyo, the bigger explanation for the vending machines is a fascination or even an obsession with automation and robotics.
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Everything that can be automated here, is automated.
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When I go into order like a ramen or breakfast, more often than not I order on a machine and I give a little ticket to someone.
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It's indicative of a broader cultural trend of wanting to automate every system you possibly can.
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Every taxi in Tokyo has automated doors that the driver controls.
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I don't want to overstate this.
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There's still a major appreciation for handcrafted artisanal goods here in Japan.
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A good example of this is the seven-year-old coffee shop I just got out of.
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Where they literally use a weighted scale to weigh their coffee beans before grinding them and brewing them to order
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To cool down their coffee, they put it into a metal vessel and spin it around a giant ice cube.
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So yes, they love automation but they're still very much in touch with the handmade.
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So another thing that totally contributes is this: coinage.
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So much coinage.
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The one big caveat to the whole automation thing is that definitely got on board with credit cards yet everything is cash based.
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And because of that you always have coinage.
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One of their highest coin is worth like five dollars.
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And let's be honest.
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There's nothing more satisfying than unloading some of the change in your pocket into a vending machine for some yummy treat.
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My personal favorite item is hot green tea comes out wonderfully warm, and you just wonder how you got so lucky.
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So Japan is an aging nation with expensive labor and a love for robots and too many coins in its pocket.