|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
: Japan
Disaffection and slump dominate Japanese election
By John Roberts
24 June 2000
Use
this version to print
Japan goes to the polls tomorrow to elect a new House of Representatives
and potentially a new government. Called early after the death
of Prime Minister Keizo Obuchi, the election has been dominated
by public disaffection and mounting divisions within the political
elite over the ongoing stagnation of the economy.
Now led by Prime Minister Yoshiro Mori, the Liberal Democratic
Party (LDP) has held power since 1955, except for a 10-month period
in 1993-1994. The party currently rules through a coalition with
the New Conservative Partyan LDP breakawayand the
Buddhist-based New Komeito party.
Ranged against the LDP is an unstable coalition being built
around the Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) and its leader Yukio
Hatoyama. The DPJ or Minshuto was formed during a 1993 split within
the LDP.
At stake in the election are 300 single seat constituencies,
and 180 seats allocated on a regional basis and elected by proportional
voting. A close result is being predicted, with the LDP and its
partners aiming for just over 250 seats. If they do not achieve
this, the LDP could split again.
While both ruling class camps are attempting to mobilise support
among the general population, there are clear signs of a deep
alienation from the political establishment and its parties, particularly
among youth.
A survey of young voters aged 18-29 found that only 6 percent
were satisfied with the political situation and only 2 percent
said politicians could be trusted. A poll published in the Japan
Times showed that 57 percent of voters aged in their 20s were
uninterested in the election and 36 percent of voters overall
shared the same position. Another survey result showed that 70
percent of voters interviewed believed the election would change
nothing.
A Kyodo News poll last weekend put support for the LDP
at around 33.5 percent, with its coalition partners on 4.5 percent.
The Democratic Party polled 9.6 percent, the Liberal Party 2 percent
and the former Socialist Party 3.9 percent. Over 33.6 percent
were undecided.
In the last national election, for half the seats in House
of Councillors, voter turnout was only 58 percent. This figure,
however, was up on the previous national election figures, also
for the upper house, in which the turnout was 44 percent, an all-time
low.
The LDP has been the traditional party of big business during
the post-war period. Like workers in other countries, many Japanese
workers once saw the social reform policies of the Socialist Party
as an alternative. Most of the trade unions were politically aligned
with the SP. When the SP joined the LDP in government in 1994,
millions of workers turned away from these organisations, further
adding to the disgust with official politics.
The Japanese Communist Party (JCP) directly benefited from
the discrediting of the Socialist Party and is likely to make
further electoral gains tomorrow. The JCP doubled its voting strength
from 4.83 million in 1993 to 8.19 million in the 1998 upper house
election. It now has 26 seats in the House of Representatives,
compared with 14 for the Social Democrats. It is polling 4.1 percent.
The JCP is in no sense a socialist party. It advocates policies
that meet up with the needs of sections of big business seeking
to slash public spending. Its leaders have been in the forefront
of calling for an anti-LDP coalition, attacking the LDP for dramatically
increasing the national debt. JCP Presidium Chairman Tetsuzo Fuwa
called for public works expenditure to be cut by half, denouncing
the LDP for wasting taxpayers' money and piling
up state debts. He has demagogically called for the money
to be spent instead on social security and homes for the elderly.
While the Democratic Party leaders have said, to this point,
that they would not include the JCP in a coalition, the JCP's
political role is becoming crucial for Japanese capitalism. It
is the only force left in Japanese politics that can take on the
former role of the old Socialist Party of containing working class
opposition and diverting it into parliamentary directions.
One long-standing policy of the JCP now makes it acceptable
to sections of the Japanese elite. Initially aligned with the
Soviet regime, the JCP called for the scrapping of the US-Japan
Security Treaty of 1952a policy that was laced with Japanese
nationalism and anti-American chauvinism.
Under the 1952 treaty Japan accepted military curtailment and
a subordinate role in the US-led anti-Soviet alliance. But with
the collapse of the USSR and the collision of Japanese and American
interests in a world economy characterised by fierce global competition,
the foundation of this arrangement has disappeared.
A likely partner in any coalition formed by the DPJ would be
Ichiro Ozawa's Liberal Party. Ozawa, another LDP breakaway, is
best known for his demand that Japan aggressively assert its interests
internationally, particularly against the United States. In an
election speech he also called for reform measures that would
cause pain.
In the course of the election Prime Minister Mori has made
his own appeals to nationalist sentiment, harking back to the
pre-war imperial Japanese state. He is seeking to consolidate
support among layers demanding the protection of Japanese capital
against international rivals, and to divert attention away from
the mounting economic and social problems.
Economic stagnation
The Japanese economy, the second largest in the world, has
recorded low or negative growth rates throughout the 1990s. At
the heart of the ongoing decline is the crisis of the country's
banking and financial system. The collapse of the speculative
Japanese share market and property boom in 1989, followed by the
Asian economic meltdown of 1997, has left the major Japanese banks
with an estimated 76 trillion yen or $US900 billion in bad debts
and non-performing loans.
The consequences have been the reluctance of Japanese banks
to lend, low levels of private investment and major banking failures,
such as that of the Long Term Credit Bank and Yamaichi Securities
in 1998. In a business climate marked by stagnation and uncertainty,
companies have laid off staff and lowered wages and salaries.
The response of LDP governments has been to seek to protect
the major Japanese banks and corporations from bankruptcy or possible
take-over. It has both injected public funds directly into their
balance sheets and poured billions of dollars into public works
programs to stimulate economic activity and stave off economic
depression and mass unemployment.
In recent years, tax breaks have been provided to companies
to lessen the cost of maintaining their work forces and to pay
off debts. Smaller businesses have been granted government-guaranteed
emergency loans. Shopping coupons have been issued to stimulate
local communities. Even as the election campaign was underway,
Vice-Finance Minister Nobuaki Usui and Mori declared that additional
funds may be used for further efforts to stimulate the economy.
The principal result of these policies up to now has been to
drive public debt to $US6.3 trillion or 136 percent of Gross Domestic
Product. Interest payments on the national debt now devour 65
percent of tax receipts. And yet, in an indication of the depth
of the crisis, the historically unprecedented pump-priming has
failed to revive the economy. In the last quarter of 1999 the
economy contracted by 1.41 percent.
By March this year, official unemployment had grown to 3.49
million or 4.9 percent of the work force. Most economic commentators
estimate that the official figure understates the situation by
half. Major companies such as Nissan and Mazda have been forced
into effective mergers with US and European transnationals and
have announced mass job cuts and factory closures to put their
balance sheets in order.
The public works programs are widely perceived to have benefited
construction and steel companies that are closely associated with
the LDP and among the least efficient of the Japanese corporations.
Much of the government spending has been directed toward rural
areas where the LDP has its electoral base.
The social cement of post war Japantrust in the government,
an expanding economy, rising living standards and life-time employment
offered by the major Japanese corporationshas been shattered.
There are growing demands in some Japanese and international
corporate circles for a change of policy that would open the economy
to greater foreign competition and investment, raise interest
rates, allow inefficient banks and companies to go to the wall
and bring government debt under control. Among the prime targets
of criticism are agricultural subsidies that consume 4 percent
of the budget.
Mori has promised that his coalition will persevere with the
same policies, claiming that the economy grew 0.5 percent in 1999
as a result. The LDP is insisting that government spending is
necessary until the economy is returned to high growth rates.
To an extent therefore, the DPJ has become the mouthpiece for
those wanting an economic shift. It is seeking to form a new governing
coalition by combining calls for economic reforms with attacks
on the corrupt practices of the LDP. It has called for economic
restructuring, small income tax rises and a 30 percent reduction
in public works spending.
Among wide layers of Japanese society there is a sense that
a major crisis is rapidly accumulating and nothing is being done
to avert it. The DJP is seeking to generate popular support by
appealing to such sentiment. DJP leader Yukio Hatoyama began his
party's campaign by calling for voters to bid farewell to
old politics, in which money has recklessly spent on public construction
works, and bring about new politics of democracy.
Tomorrow's vote can only lead to greater political instability
in Japan. No social class is satisfied and no clear program or
solutions are being advanced. One thing is certain: the present
economic and political situation is untenable and when it unravels
it will have global ramifications.
See Also:
Mori's 'gaffes' point to a revival of
right-wing Japanese nationalism
[13 June 2000]
Economic stagnation set to continue in
Japan
[3 June 2000]
From Obuchi to Mori: a carefully
managed transition in Japan
[6 April 2000]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |