Japan’s Soft Power: Why It Works (And Why China Struggles)

Global Comparisons

Anime, manga, and Studio Ghibli conquered the world without government help. The secret? Authenticity over messaging.


Japan’s cultural export success happened despite government indifference, not because of it. There’s a lesson there.

The Japanese Paradox

Japan has no Ministry of Cool. No cultural export strategy. No government funding for anime studios or manga publishers.

Yet Japanese culture dominates global imagination. Anime is watched by billions. Manga sections fill bookstores worldwide. Studio Ghibli films are considered art. Japanese aesthetics influence design everywhere.

How did this happen?

Authenticity Over Messaging

Japanese cultural exports succeed because they don’t try to represent Japan.

Anime isn’t “Japanese animation.” It’s just anime—its own category, its own conventions, its own global audience. The Japanese-ness is present but not performative. It’s there for those who want it, invisible for those who don’t.

Chinese cultural exports often fail because they’re too explicitly Chinese. They wear their culture on their sleeve. They’re designed to represent China, not to serve an audience need.

The result? They feel like propaganda, even when they’re not.

Creator-Driven, Not Institution-Driven

Japanese cultural exports come from individual creators, not state institutions.

Hayao Miyazaki made films he wanted to make. Akira Toriyama drew manga he wanted to read. They weren’t executing a cultural diplomacy strategy. They were expressing themselves.

This authenticity resonates. Audiences can tell when something is genuine versus when it’s manufactured.

Chinese cultural production is often institution-driven. State-owned studios. Government-funded projects. Cultural diplomacy initiatives. The result is polished but soulless.

Genre Innovation

Japan didn’t just export existing genres. They invented new ones.

Shonen manga. Isekai. Mecha. Slice-of-life. These categories didn’t exist before Japanese creators defined them. Now they’re global genres.

When you create the category, you own the category. Japanese cultural exports don’t compete on equal terms. They define the terms.

China often tries to enter existing categories—Hollywood films, Western pop music, European fine art. We compete where others have already won.

The Otaku Economy

Japan built a culture around passionate fans. The word “otaku”—once an insult—is now a badge of honor.

This fan culture does the work of export. Fans translate manga. Fans subtitle anime. Fans create communities. Fans spend money.

The Japanese industry learned to serve these fans. Give them what they want, and they’ll do your marketing for you.

China has fans too. But our industries often treat them as problems to be managed rather than partners to be empowered.

What China Can Learn

I’m not suggesting China should abandon its cultural institutions or stop valuing tradition. But we can learn from Japan’s approach:

1. Let Creators Create

Give individual creators resources and freedom. Let them make what they believe in, not what serves a national narrative.

2. Focus on Universal Themes

The most successful Japanese exports deal with universal human experiences—growing up, finding purpose, love, loss, courage. The Japanese setting is incidental.

3. Build Fan Communities

Don’t just distribute content. Build relationships with the people who love it. Give them tools to spread your culture.

4. Invent Categories

Don’t compete in existing genres. Create new ones. Define the terms on which you’re evaluated.

5. Be Patient

Japanese cultural dominance took decades. It wasn’t a government program. It was thousands of creators making thousands of works, with the best rising to global attention.

The Hard Truth

China’s cultural export challenge isn’t resources or talent. It’s approach.

We try to engineer cultural success. Japan let it emerge. We focus on representation. Japan focused on expression. We see culture as national asset. Japan sees it as individual creation.

Until we shift our mindset, we’ll keep struggling to achieve what Japan accomplished by not trying.


About Ian Xia: Cultural strategist, founder of Lightopia and Immersia, and architect of CAAP™ (Culture As A Product). Ian helps cultural organizations and creative entrepreneurs take their IP to international markets.