Posted on 12/22/2014 4:18:21 PM PST by SeekAndFind
Following the start of Abenomics in 2012, Japan moved back to the center of attention of global financial markets. After two and a half decades of economic stagnation, hopes were high that Japan would escape its long stagnation and deflation.
Plenty of economists around the globe hoped that, in so doing, Japan would show the western world, mainly the Eurozone, the way to do the same and avoid a similar long period of low growth and stagnating incomes.
Conversely, the failure of Abes plan for Japans recovery would not only be a disaster for the country of the rising sun.
It would also be very bad news for central bankers and politicians in the west as well. It would prove that Keynesian policies dont work in a world of too much debt and shrinking populations.
To assess the probabilities of these scenarios, it is worthwhile to have a deeper look on how Japan ended up in the current economic malaise.
Japan served globally as a role model for economic development in the 1980s. After an economic miracle following the Second World War, Japanese companies started to dominate in leading industries like machinery and equipment, automotive and consumer electronics.
Similar to todays views on China, back then books explaining the Japanese miracle and describing the unstoppable rise of the nation to the leading economic powerhouse of the world were highly popular around the globe.
Japanese corporations also began to invest in prestigious artwork and trophy real estate assets around the world. When the Japanese bubble like all bubbles deflated from 1990 onwards, asset prices collapsed. However, credit levels in Japan remained high.
Japan acted just as the Keynesian textbook prescribes. It compensated a deep drop in domestic demand with higher government expenditures. As a result, many companies, which in reality were insolvent, were not restructured but kept alive with low interest rates and bridge financing.
What happened over the past 25 years is simple: Japans corporate sector was a net saver and reduced its leverage. Private households also reduced their savings significantly, from levels of 20% to 3% today. Finally, the Japanese government built up a huge debt load, rising from about 50% of GDP at the end of the 1980s to close to 250% today.
Despite all of this, the efforts to reignite growth in Japan failed. The only results were a significant increase in the overall debt burden of the country and a change of the principal debtor. That debtor is now the Japanese government — instead of Japanese corporations as before.
At the same time, the workforce in Japan started to shrink. Actually, Japan reached the peak in its workforce at the same time as its financial bubble peaked. That suggests that the peak in the workforce became an additional driver for the build-up of the bubble.
If so, this would be another disquieting parallel to Europe, where the labor force also peaked in parallel to the credit bubble in 2007.
One fact is often overlooked. Precisely because of the Japanese populations shrinking, on a GDP per capita basis the Japanese economy has been outgrowing the U.S. economy in the quarter century since 1990.
That seems to be good news. Why then worry? Unfortunately, GDP and debt are nominal quantities. Debt can only be served out of nominal income. It thus does not help a country if its GDP per capita grows and at the same time the population shrinks.
Here again, Europe has reason to worry. Europe is in the beginning of a similar demographic development albeit one that is not as severe in all European countries as it is in Japan, thanks to the European Union’s more open immigration policies.
Japan can therefore be described as a country that has the following features:
1. Above average per capita productivity growth.
2. Shrinking population (from currently 127 million to 87 million inhabitants by 2060).
3. Low real economic growth for decades to come (as demographics continue to deteriorate).
4. Shrinking savings rate, due to an older population which will start dissaving soon and therefore will not continue to fund the deficits of the government as in the past.
5. Corporate sector with a strong balance sheet after 25 years of deleveraging, but with low investments and no inclination to invest in Japan (given demographics). Corporations are thus a net saver.
6. A government with record high debt of nearly 250% of GDP.
7. Debt service already consumes 43% of the Japanese governments revenues, just to cover interest on the outstanding government debt and in spite of interest rates being close to zero.
8. A central bank, which adapted quantitative easing already in 2001 and is willing to do everything that is necessary to support its economy.
9. A country that has failed to generate inflation until now, but has rather seen a long period of stable consumer prices and slightly falling overall price level as measured by the GDP deflator.
Simply put, such a country is bankrupt. No economy can sustain a total debt level (for the government, households and non-financial corporations) of more than 400% per cent of GPD without having a nominal growth rate that is significantly higher than the level of interest rates.
Analysts make the mistake of believing that lack of inflation means the currency is not a long term worry. But that is not true. The cheapening of the currency has a snap-back built in because of the carry trade unwinding and bubble popping. The central bank pursues the same failed policy endlessly. Since there can be no long term confidence in the value of the currency, there can be no long term investment, just short term speculation and carry trade. Abenomics is the ultimate manifestation of that stupidity. The falling savings rates that they are celebrating are a symptom of the problem.
It’s very simple, Japan will go back into pre-Meiji era isolation before it raises immigration. The rest of the debt, and money problems are just numbers to be moved around as needed.
The debt isn't the problem but what the borrowed wealth was used for: government consumption, wealth never to be seen from again. You can't burn massive amounts of wealth and expect to be wealthier.
You just hit the nail right on the head. People talking about the dismal state of the Japanese economy really need to take a look at the average Japanese shopping center. I was at Kichijoji (West Tokyo) on Sunday to pick up a new heater for the apartment — every shop is full, every restaurant is packed, teeming is the word commonly used, and it fits.
What makes Japanese debt different than that of any other country is a combination of “wari wari nihongin” (we are all Japanese) and the realization that the largest percentage of debt is owed to other Japanese — who have no expectation that it will ever be paid back.
Like most long term foreigners living in Japan, I had to jump through a sizable number of hoops to get my visa. It wasn’t automatic 25 years ago, and it still isn’t. I just renewed for another three year visa last October. Japan will accept foreigners who have trades and skills they need, with restrictions on a lot of things, but mostly with the full understanding that you the foreigner are a guest, and better be a well-behaved guest, or you will leave.
There is no intention of changing those rules. However, since there are no freebies for the immigrants who go arrive here, it is not a popular destination in any case. There is certainly no, nor will there ever be, a “guest worker” program like Europe’s. Japan saw long ago what untrammeled immigration did to the EU, what it is doing to the US, and they do not want any part of that.
http://www.brookings.edu/research/articles/2012/06/china-demographics-wang
10. A highly corrupted government.
So when do the pension checks start to bounce?
Look around on The Globalist web site.
waterboarding is really just a re-assertion of...white supremacy.
Got it. We’re all just Waciss for wanting to find out where the nuke is.
This dim bulb article purports to be about economics. It is not.
It’s just multiculti claptrap about why successful nations are the ones that fling open their doors to ever increasing numbers of immigrants...who must not look, talk, or act like you. Doncha know.
More Diversity Uber Alles nonsense with a thin veneer of econochat.
Ping
Socialism simply does not work, as Obama has clearly demonstrated.
I’m guessing that Japan doesn’t have an underclass anywhere near the size of ours, and that their welfare is not structured to favor chronically dependent baby factories. If you dig into the US demographics, birthing age people of the middle and upper classes have birthrates just as low as the Europeans.
Let me fix this.
"It would also be very bad news for central bankers and politicians in the west as well. It would prove that Keynesian policies dont work."
OK, that does it.
The author totally misses the fact that Japan is centrally planned and burdened with a regulatory nightmare. Has he ever heard of MITI, now METI?
Japan is the failure of crony capitalism and central planning.
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