Events - Speaker

Breakfast with Hon. Jim Prentice

  • March 23 (Wed) to March 24 (Thu) Cancelled
  • 23:30 ~ 00:30
  • Imperial Hotel
  • 5,000 (member) | 6,000 (guest) yen

BREAKFAST WITH Hon. JIM PRENTICE

VICE CHAIRMAN CIBC, AND FORMER SENIOR MINISTER IN HARPER GOVERNMENT

Canada’s Economic prospects

Introduction

The Readiness is all ...

  • March 16 (Wed) Cancelled
  • 03:00 ~ 07:30
  • Cancelled

Please note this event has been postponed. The details will be announced.

After almost a quarter of a century in post, Ian de Stains is retiring as Executive Director of the BCCJ. Join us for a luncheon designed to celebrate his tenure and to wish him well in his future endeavours.

As a BBC producer-presenter Ian was seconded to NHK in 1976. For four years he worked on radio and television programmes designed to introduce Japan and all things Japanese to the outside world. A number of these programmes were nominated for—and some won—international awards.

Real Mothers of Japan

  • March 10 (Thu) Registration Closed
  • 09:30 ~ 11:30
  • Australian Embassy B2 Reception
  • 5,250 (member) 6,900 (guest) yen

Over the last six years the McCann PULSE program of continuous investigation into people’s lives has focused on understanding the younger generations of mothers in Japan. Volume 7 of the “Real Mothers” study has just been launched and looks in-depth at the social media usage, recession buying habits and views of the future of Japan’s mothers of children fifteen years old and under. The event will look in detail at how today’s generation of mothers got where they are, what they think of their lives, their families and their purchase decisions.

Last Exit Asia: The world wants to export to Asia-What will be the Impact?

  • November 25 (Thu) Registration Closed
  • 09:00 ~ 11:00
  • Shangri-La Hotel Tokyo
  • 6,000 yen (member)

This event is organized by The German Chamber of Commerce in Japan and Industry in Japan. CCCJ Members are invited to attend at member price. Please register directly with the GCCIJ.

After the Crisis, prospects in Japan and the West look dim while Asia is booming, so everybody wants to sell and invest in Asia and China. A ‘wall of money’ is already hitting these economies, producing asset bubbles and fanning currency wars.

But will Asia be able to turn from the ‘World’s Workshop’ to the ‘World’s Engine of Growth?’

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