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Intelligence for Better Decision Making
| Domain | Causal Chain | Possible Outcome |
|---|---|---|
| Geopolitics & Defense | (Great-power rivalry intensity ↑ → Military expenditure spike (% GDP) ↑ → Defense-spending burden on fiscal balance ↑ → Arms-race expenditure gap ↑) | The ensuing arms race will worsen fiscal pressures and further intensify great-power rivalry. |
| Geopolitics & Defense | (Alliance interoperability score ↓ → Forward-deployed troop surge ↑ → Escalation probability estimate ↑) | A surge in forward-deployed troops increases contact points, elevating the risk of unintended military escalation. |
| Geopolitics & Defense | (Sanctions & export-control aggressiveness ↑ → Sanctions breadth index ↑ → Supply-chain relocation cost (% GDP) ↑ → Business fixed-investment growth deviation ↓) | Broader sanctions and higher relocation costs will depress business fixed-investment growth. |
| Geopolitics & Defense | (Maritime-claim assertiveness ↑ → Freedom-of-navigation incident count ↑ → Global shipping war-risk premium ↑ → Shipping-insurance cost share of trade value ↑) | Elevated shipping war-risk premiums will increase insurance costs, raising overall trade logistics expenses. |
| Transportation & Logistics | (Aviation bilateral & multilateral ASA openness ↓ → Air-cargo capacity utilisation ↓ → Freight-rate volatility index ↑ → Logistics cost-to-sales ratio ↑) | Reduced air-cargo capacity and volatile freight rates will drive up logistics cost-to-sales ratios for shippers. |
| Transportation & Logistics | (Aviation ASA openness ↓ → Door-to-door export lead time ↑ → Real export-market share change ↓ → Global export-market share shift ↓) | Longer door-to-door lead times will erode Japan’s export competitiveness and shrink its global market share. |
| Energy & Natural Resources | (Critical-mineral import concentration index ↑ → Resource-control share (rare earths) ↑ → Strategic-commodity price volatility ↑ → Battery cost ↑) | Higher strategic-commodity volatility will translate into increased battery costs for Japanese manufacturers. |
| Non-Interstate Conflict & Security | (Cross-border sanctuary ease score ↓ → Conflict-induced displacement flow ↑ → Civilian-conflict fatality toll ↑ → Humanitarian-aid dependency ratio ↑) | Restricted refuge access could amplify displacement and casualties, boosting humanitarian aid dependency. |
| Social Cohesion | (Anti-discrimination enforcement strength ↓ → Online hateful-content visibility share ↑ → Intergroup violence incident frequency ↑ → Social-trust composite swing ↓) | Rising online hate content and intergroup violence will undermine social trust between communities. |
| Politics | (Great-power rivalry intensity ↑ → Political-risk sovereign spread ↑ → Investor political-risk premium ↑ → FDI net inflow (% GDP) ↓) | Increased political-risk premiums will deter foreign investment, reducing FDI inflows as a share of GDP. |
Erudite Risk takes an all risks approach to intelligence reporting. We categorize key intelligence into one of 40 different risk intelligence categories.
The goal is to provide intelligence that allows decision makers to avoid being blindsided by what they may have missed, while informing them to make better decisions as well.
Erudite Risk also includes operations categories so you can monitor the environment for better decision making. Everything is tied together--what happens in risk affects operations and what happens in the market impacts risk profiles.
We categorize key intelligence into one of 30 different operations intelligence categories.
Different roles and functions within the organization can monitor different key issue areas. HR may monitor employment, wages, regulations, labor and management relations, etc., while P&L leaders may monitor overall developing trends.
Japan looks to compile over 20 tril. yen stimulus package amid rising costs
The Mainichi | English | News | Nov. 21, 2025 | UndeterminedEconomic Growth
The Japanese government is preparing an economic stimulus package exceeding 20 trillion yen (approximately $129 billion) to address rising living costs. The plan includes 2 trillion yen in discretionary subsidies for local governments and about 400 billion yen for cash handouts of 20,000 yen per child. The measures are expected to be approved by Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi's Cabinet, possibly on Friday, and will be part of a supplementary budget for the fiscal year ending March 2026.
Among the key components of the package is a gasoline tax cut, recently agreed upon by both ruling and opposition parties. The extra budget is projected to reach 17 trillion yen, surpassing last year's 13.9 trillion yen. This comes amid Japan’s economic contraction for the first time in six quarters, driven by slower consumer spending and inflation pressures.
Additional allocations include 500 billion yen in subsidies to offset electricity and gas costs during the first three months of the next year, aiming to reduce household expenses by over 3,000 yen in January. The package also plans to support local governments with financial aid targeted at initiatives like rice vouchers, providing roughly 3,000 yen per person to help alleviate the impact of rising prices.
Financial markets have reacted with concern about the stimulus's effect on Japan's fiscal health, resulting in a selloff of the yen and government bonds. Japan’s debt-to-GDP ratio stood at 240 percent as of 2023, highlighting ongoing fiscal sustainability challenges amid the aggressive fiscal spending approach championed by Prime Minister Takaichi.
米、G20共同声明の発出に反対 参加を拒否、南アフリカに警告
US Opposes Issuance of G20 Joint Statement, Refuses Participation, Warns South Africa
Tokyo Shimbun | Local Language | News | Nov. 21, 2025 | Geopolitical Conflict and Disputes
The United States has formally opposed the issuance of a joint statement for the upcoming Group of Twenty (G20) leaders' summit scheduled for November 22-23 in South Africa. The U.S. government has communicated its refusal to participate in the summit as well as in preparatory consultations, citing disagreements with the priorities set by the South African hosts.
A document sent on November 15 indicated that the U.S. will block any outcome document from being released without its consent, as it views the proposed agenda as conflicting with its own policy positions. This marks a significant departure from the usual cooperative approach in G20 summits.
三菱商事撤退の洋上風力再公募、価格重視の審査制度を修正 経産省案
Mitsubishi Corporation Withdraws from Offshore Wind Re-bid, Ministry of Economy Proposes Revising Evaluation System to Emphasize Price
Nikkei | Local Language | News | Nov. 21, 2025 | Regulation
On November 19, the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (METI) proposed new evaluation criteria for the re-tender of offshore wind power projects after a Mitsubishi Corporation-led consortium withdrew. The revised screening system will assess bids based on electricity sales price and business plans, introducing a lower limit on bid prices to avoid unrealistically low offers. For re-tenders starting in 2026, METI will set both lower and upper limits on bid prices, with a 20-point difference between these limits to minimize scoring disparities.
The new criteria will emphasize project viability factors such as thoroughness and stability, including domestic procurement, rather than prioritizing the speed of planning. Price and project viability will each be scored out of 120 points, totaling 240 points. The three sea areas off Akita and Chiba, where the Mitsubishi consortium withdrew, will be re-tendered under this framework. The Mitsubishi consortium was initially awarded the project due to a low bid price but later withdrew, citing unprofitability amid global inflation.
Amendments were also proposed for the second and third tender rounds. Mitsui & Co. and others submitted bids without seeking additional government subsidies for electricity sales. To encourage project continuity, the government plans to allow offshore wind operators to participate in the "Long-Term Decarbonized Power Auction," guaranteeing fixed income for 20 years. Price adjustment mechanisms will cover only future material cost increases, excluding inflation prior to bidding to preserve fairness.
The government remains committed to its net zero greenhouse gas emissions target by 2050, aiming to raise wind power’s share in the energy mix from 1.1% in fiscal 2023 to 4–8% by fiscal 2040, as outlined in the Basic Energy Plan approved in February.
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