Can China really boycott Japanese goods?

Landlord, I think the spirit of this behavior is valuable, but some of it is too idealistic. There are several main aspects. First, at present, Japanese companies in China have as many as10 million employees, which is equivalent to a much larger labor force in China than in China every year. Once Japanese companies are offset, the lives of these employees will also face difficulties. Second, although China has a relatively complete industrial system at present, it still relies on foreign countries in some advanced technology products. At present, some advanced automatic production lines and large-scale medical equipment in China are still inseparable from Japanese imports. From this perspective, it can't be offset at all, and we have to admit the gap. Thirdly, the entry of Japanese enterprises or Japanese products into the China market has promoted the technological upgrading and product quality improvement of local enterprises to a certain extent, which obviously has a positive impact on the industrial upgrading of China. Fourth, in this globalized world, countries are economically integrated, and it is often that you have me and I have you. It is unrealistic for anyone to drag down unilaterally, especially China and Japan, as the second and third largest economies in the world. Fifthly, we can clearly see that in fact, only those rich people in China can afford Japanese goods, and it is neither necessary nor necessary for the poor to buy Japanese goods. We have good domestic products, so there is no need to follow suit. For enterprises in China, the key issue is to produce products that can compete with others. In that case, I believe Japanese goods will not have a big market in China. This requires the joint efforts of all China people. At the same time, those who spread "boycott Japanese goods" are actually extremely insecure. If you are afraid that others will make more money, you can only close the door. Among the rising powers in modern times, which one is intolerant. Times are different, so we can't be too narrow-minded. Contradictions are contradictions, but the economy is still very realistic.