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From Obuchi to Mori: a carefully managed transition in Japan
By Peter Symonds
6 April 2000
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Just three days after the sudden hospitalisation of Japanese
Prime Minister Keizo Obuchi following a severe stroke, the ruling
Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) has chosen Yoshiro Mori, the party's
general secretary, as his replacement. The selection was ratified
in rapid succession yesterday by the lower and upper houses of
the Japanese parliament or Diet and then by the emperor.
The entire process was carried out with a minimum of delay
and friction by party bosses concerned at the impact of any uncertainty
on public opinion, the LDP's coalition partners and the Tokyo
stock exchange. Despite modest praise in the international media
for Obuchi's term in office, the government is beset by falling
poll ratings, the defection of a coalition partner and continuing
economic recession. And it must face a national election before
October 19.
Even the announcement of the seriousness of Obuchi's stroke
was delayed for nearly 24 hours to allow the LDP's factional chieftains
a breathing space to haggle over their choice without the pressure
of public attention. Only on Monday did the Japanese public learn
that Obuchi was in intensive care, breathing only with the assistance
of a respirator and had been given drugs to reverse a precipitous
drop in blood pressure.
By then Chief Cabinet Secretary Mikkio Aoki had been put in
place as acting Prime Minister. On Tuesday, the cabinet held a
short meeting and resigned en masse to pave the way for a new
government. The factional deal to insert Mori had already been
done. One potential rival, Koichi Kato, who had stood against
Obuchi for prime minister in July 1998 and had been a critic of
government policies, indicating he would not contest the post,
saying, In this emergency situation, I think the whole party
must put its efforts together without making any internal fuss.
Kozo Watanabe, vice speaker of the lower house of parliament,
noted on Tuesday that the choice of Mori was a foregone conclusion.
Like Kato, Watanabe pointed to the anxieties within the LDP leadership
when he commented: If he [Aoki] had waited a week or 10
days after Mr Obuchi collapsed, somebody else could have raised
their hand, and there could be some chaos. But by the time Mr
Aoki announced the condition of Mr Obuchi it was already virtually
decided who would take over.
Understanding why Mori was selected for the job rather than
another LDP timeserver is somewhat akin to trying to divine the
future from tea leaves. In the backroom world of LDP politics,
the shifting strengths of the various factions, one's position
in the pecking order and loyalty to key party powerbrokers play
as much a role as experience, policy or other political considerations.
It appears that Mori's particular talents included his perceived
loyalty to Obuchi, good relations with the LDP's coalition partnerthe
Buddhist-backed New Komeito partyand a willingness to continue
the present policies.
Mori is 62, the same age as Obuchi, whom he knew from his student
days at the prestigious Waseda University. He worked as a journalist
on the right-wing Sankei Shimbun before being elected to
parliament in 1969. He has served 10 parliamentary terms and held
the position of education minister before being implicated in
the 1988 Recruit scandal. A number of politicians were found to
have received bundles of shares in return for political favours
and in April 1989 then prime minister Noboru Takeshita was forced
to resign. After a brief period of political penance, Mori was
made international trade and industry minister in 1992-93 and
construction minister in 1995-96.
Mori's first comments, after a brief expression of sympathy
for Obuchi, were to reassure international markets that he would
continue the economic policies of his predecessor. I will
continue to pursue Obuchi's economic revitalisation policies and
make every effort to restore the economy to stable growth,
he said. I have no intention of delaying structural reforms.
His message will, however, be greeted with a good deal of scepticism
in the US and Europe. A number of commentators have used the occasion
of Obuchi's replacement to comment on Japan's economic woes and
to castigate it for failing to press ahead with economic restructuring.
An article in Britain's Times newspaper, entitled Cruel
SpringPolitical infighting is the last thing that Japan
needs, itemises the declining popularity of the government,
the return of the Japanese economy to recession, record levels
of unemployment, the failure of huge government spending packages
to stimulate the economy and the country's massive national debt,
expected to climb to 133 percent of GDP this year.
Japan continues to frustrate its friends, the Times
comments. It appears still to be digging itself deeper into
the hole that opened up in 1990. There have been spurts of growth,
but of miserable quality. Too much money goes on to the wrong
things, notably pork-barrel construction projects in rural LDP
heartlands. The restructuring of its financial system has been
too timid; its banks and insurers need not just emergency rescues
but radical changes in the way they operate.
In a more caustic vein, BusinessWeek posted an article
on its web site under the title A Sad Truth: It Hardly Matters
Who Japan's Premier Is. It pointed out that the LDP represented
the Old Economy industries such as construction, small manufacturers,
mom-and-pop retailers, and farming intereststhe economy's
most inefficient. BusinessWeek then provided the
following advice for the next government:
It's no secret that for Japan to really get moving again,
a lot of creative destruction is needed to burn off excess industrial
capacity, recycle jobs into faster-growth areas, and end subsidies
that shield the laggards. That has been the case for more than
a decade, but few politicians in the LDP have had the guts to
do anything about it.
This kind of structural transformation causes economic
painat least in the short term. But with hard-pressed companies
already pushing up the jobless rate regardless of government efforts,
basic change is going to happen sooner or later. Gradualism on
reform will only drag the whole nasty process out longer. In a
bizarre way, if the LDP wants to save Japan by pushing for dramatic
reforms, it will have to destroy its political base first.
There is more than an element of self-interest in the policy
prescriptions offered from Washington, London and elsewhere. The
creative destruction that BusinessWeek writes
about so blithely would mean the obliteration not just of mom-and-pop
businesses but substantial sections of Japanese financial
and industrial capital currently in competition with American
and European corporations. It is precisely this that a succession
of Japanese governments has sought to avoid while at the same
time seeking to make Japanese corporations more competitive with
their international rivals.
The BusinessWeek comments do, however, serve to underscore
the basic dilemma facing the new Mori government. Sections of
big business both in Japan and internationally are demanding a
far more ruthless approach to the implementation of pro-market
reforms. At the same time these policies are creating the highest
levels of unemployment in the postwar period, the breakdown of
Japan's lifelong employment system, a widening gulf between rich
and poor, and widespread social dislocation and alienation.
With an election looming, support for the LDP in the opinion
polls has plunged to less than 30 percent, with one survey last
week reporting that 60 percent of voters registered their disgust
with the actions of the coalition government. In recent times,
the voter turnout in elections has hovered around 50 percent,
with young voters in particular staying away in droves. It is
not just the LDP that many people are disgusted with but the entire
political system.
Compounding the political problems facing the LDP, one of its
coalition alliesthe Liberal Party headed by former LDP powerbroker
Ichiro Ozawabroke ranks with the government last weekend
over policy disagreements. Ozawa advocates a far more aggressive
assertion of Japanese interests, including the use of its military
overseas as part of UN and other international operations. The
Liberal Party has since split, leading to the formation of a new
groupingthe Conservative Partymade up of those MPs
who want to retain the coalition with the LDP.
Perversely, despite the political uncertainty created by Obuchi's
stroke and the ongoing economic and political turmoil, the Tokyo
stockmarket has continued to rise this week, reaching its highest
level in three years on Monday. The following day, the Nikkei
index registered some declines but most commentators attributed
the falls to the impact of the severe drop in the Nasdaq technology
stock index in New York rather than the fate of Obuchi.
As the New York Times commented: Japan's languid
economy slid into another recession late last year, companies
are struggling to overhaul themselves, the government's debts
are piling up and the prime minister is comatose with a stroke.
None of that news seems to have fazed the Japanese stock market,
which has outperformed the United States market over the last
year.
Concern over the Nikkei appears to have been one of the considerations
behind the LDP's decision to conceal the news of Obuchi's stroke.
As one commentator noted: To be sure, the government was
careful to keep news that Mr Obuchi was hooked up to a respirator
to itself until well after trading stopped on Monday, making sure
that investors focussed on the good news emanating from the currency
market and from a survey of business confidence released on Monday
rather than on the prime minister's illness.
There is a curious parallel between the parasitic behaviour
of the stock market and that of the LDP's political operators.
Speculative money is flooding into shares in conditions where
the Japanese economy has been flat on its back for most of a decade
and the financial system is in an ongoing crisis. Similarly with
Obuchi on life support in a hospital, the LDP powerbrokers are
calculating how best to exploit his illness. With little else
in the way of political capital, they are considering calling
an early election to try to tap into whatever public sympathy
may exist for Obuchi. Both phenomena point to a social system
in deep decay.
See Also:
Japan slides back into recession
[11 February 2000]
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