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The era of the weak yen should be boom time for robots

It is now cheap for Japanese companies to ‘reshore’ production, but automation is key

After months of defying forecasts, the yen ended last week with a near vertical plunge under its belt and the glint of more craziness to come. The Japanese authorities have opened their playbook to the page on fake intervention. A glut of central bank announcements next week looks sure to revive the turmoil.

It may be a difficult time to be a forex analyst, but it looks like a brilliant moment to be a Japanese robot.

The yen’s sharp plunge against the dollar this year has highlighted some pressing questions around Asia’s largest developed economy. Japan is a resource-poor country that imports most of its energy, food and raw materials; it has let wages stagnate for two decades and must now protect a shrinking and ageing population that has largely forgotten the pain of inflation; its corporations have moved almost 40 per cent of their manufacturing capacity overseas since 1995, blurring the picture of whether a weak yen is fundamentally good or bad for industry.

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