To rebuild or Renovate?
Due to soaring electricity bills, large-scale facilities are increasing their expenses by 10 million yen a year.
And in the construction of buildings, the construction unit price has risen by more than 30% and bids have not dropped.
I hear that the rebuilding plan for a municipal nursery school in the Tohoku region has also stalled.
In Tokai, tenders for nursing homes do not fall.
It seems that some corporations have been unable to obtain loans due to loss of profitability if they forced themselves to drop bids with a unit price higher than planned.
This will only lead to bankruptcy.
It is a reproduction of the time when the real estate bubble burst 30 years ago.
At that time, private businesses that built luxurious buildings all went bankrupt later.
Hotels, resorts, even retirement homes.
If so, are nursery schools and nursing homes okay now?
In fact, since the income is fixed, it is not possible to pay for expenses that exceed the business plan excessively.
All kinds of prices are going up, but the biggest thing is labor costs and construction costs.
Electricity bills and ingredients are everything.
Nevertheless, from the next fiscal year, the medical care unit price will decrease.
Nursing care has been supported by administrative subsidies.
Due to the financial difficulties, the government has to rely on the private sector.
From now on, there will be facilities that will be closed and corporations that will go bankrupt.
Fundamentally, social compensation projects cannot be established without subsidies and public loans, which is the foundation of the Japanese system.
Despite this, it seems that this time, even the day service is a comprehensive business, and it seems to be a policy to operate with the tax of the local government.
This would be impossible.
Even if the administration takes budgetary measures, the administration already lacks the human resources and experienced people.
Then, are there any private businesses that will be contracted by the government?
Probably not because there is no profit.
There are public and private businesses in this world, but basically both are supported by tax subsidies.
Unlike the 19th century, which was supported by churches and volunteers.
From the point of view of supporting Japan’s social security system, I think the tax increase will come to an end.
From now on, there may be more facilities that cannot be newly built or rebuilt and will continue with renovations.
It seems the time has come to fundamentally rethink the social security business in a downhill economy.
Children, old people, working adults, all populations will decrease.
As a reform proposal, I think it would be effective to review the occupational systems of doctors, nurses, care workers, nursery teachers, and so on.
This is the realm of the work of politicians who change laws.
Recently, I often feel that the field of medical care and childcare is not understood by the public.
After all, it is the responsibility of the people themselves.
The medical and welfare sector has clearly entered an era of business restructuring and downsizing after growth and development.
Climbing down a mountain is more difficult than climbing up.
Watch your step and move forward.
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