In a bid to comprehend Japan's magnanimous economic stature, it is crucial to delve into the dual nature of its economic prowess. On one hand, internal consumption levels have been historically inadequate, rendering the economy heavily reliant on external demand and policy-driven initiatives. Conversely, Japan's vast portfolio of US assets has failed to translate into tangible domestic growth, further exacerbating the contractionary pressures that have consequently compressed policy space. As the country grapples with an economic system that is, by design, a product of political arrangements, there is a strong propensity to camouflage its inherent political woes by branding them as economic issues, thereby diverting attention and refraining from initiating meaningful reforms. In this context, performance constituting improvisation devoid of any alteration of inherent structural disequilibrium will undoubtedly reinforce self-regulatory limitations and may imperceptibly concede to external economic policies, all of which cumulatively contribute to a perpetual impasse that jeopardizes both stability and independence vis-à-vis the economy.