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WSWS : News
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: Japan
A glimpse of US-Japan economic tensions
By Nick Beams
9 September 2000
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Every so often an incident takes place which exposes some of
the real conflicts taking place behind the scenes in the world
of international finance. One such event was a seminar held in
Canberra last Monday and reported the following day in the Australian
Financial Review.
According to the AFR's account, Japan's former top international
finance official Eisuke Sakakibara, the one-time vice-minister
for finance known as Mr Yen, started by accusing
the United States of exploiting Asia's financial crisis to unseat
governments that were not to its liking.
The US has this mentality of using the crisis,
he said. Trying to use or even create a crisis to change
a country's political regime is interventionunlawful intervention.
When I say these things to my Western counterparts, they
say, Well, isn't it good that a corrupt government collapsed?'
Sakakibara claimed that the terms of the International Monetary
Fund support package for Indonesia were aimed at bringing intolerable
pressure to bear on the Suharto regime. I tried, Japan tried,
to modify the policy, but against the coalition of the US, the
IMF and Germany I was powerless, he said.
Japanese corporations had developed close ties with the Suharto
regime and Japan sought to provide assistance when the Asian crisis
struck. But the US demanded that the system of so-called crony
capitalism, based on close ties between the government,
banks and particular corporations, be dismantled.
It was not only in Indonesia where Japanese and US interests
collided. The response of the IMF to the Asian crisis was largely
dictated by an agenda drawn up by Washington and Wall Street to
end the so-called Asian model of capitalist development,
based on close collaboration between the banks and major corporations,
and replace it with a more open financial market.
The purpose of this program was to strengthen the position
of US corporations and financial firms and open up new areas previously
closed off.
Japan, which had been the largest beneficiary of the previous
system, sought to defend it when the Asian crisis struck in July-August
1997 and proposed a $100 billion Asian Monetary Fund in order
that afflicted countries did not have to come under the discipline
of the IMF. But the US and other major powers, including Britain
and Germany vetoed the proposal.
Faced with the prospect of an open breach with the US if it
proceeded, the Japanese government backed down. But the proposal
for an Asian Monetary Fund, and closer co-operation between Asian
economic powers has not been shelved and may start winning greater
supportpossibly from seeming unlikely quarters.
In his address to the Canberra seminar, the deputy governor
of the Reserve Bank of Australia, Stephen Grenville, said Australia
should actively seek membership of the Association of South East
Asian Nations (ASEAN) plus three financial group. The grouping,
which comprises the 10 ASEAN countries plus Korea, Japan and China,
has been set up to strengthen financial ties between countries
in the region.
Grenville indicated it was necessary to enhance regional financial
co-operation in the aftermath of the Asian crisis. Co-operative
arrangements were crucial to ensure that an amplified regional
voice was heard in global financial discussions.
This would help counter the danger the US would
promote the interests of countries of greatest concern, in Latin
America, while Europe would look to its Eastern European neighbours,
leaving the Asian countries without a big-country champion.
Significantly, Grenville pointed to a shift in Australia's
position on the proposal for an Asian Monetary Fund. Australia
backed the US when the fund proposal was floated in 1997, but
Grenville said it should now keep an open mind about the proposition.
See Also:
The Asian
economic meltdown
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