<p>Ok, adult here. I am going to give you my honest assesment. No, not if you mean actually using your Japanese degree alone. You could get an MBA, and combine it and find a company that might value your Japanese. </p>
<p>Let me give you a scenario. You go to Toyota in San Antonio, (or go online) but let me use the physical as metaphor. So you go to San Antonio, go to the Toyota plant and say, I am interested in using my Japanese to work for you They might say metaphorically, well we have a whole country that speaks Japanese, but do you know anything about Logistics and Shipping. If you can say yes, then the repsonse might be well The Japanese might be a nice addition, but you real job is tracking and shipping and schedluing our equipment movement to make this Toyota Tundra. Just a perspective. </p>
<p>The other option is state department very competitive, and it doesnt meet the $45K or 'elite few" disclaimer</p>