|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
: Japan
IMF says Japans economy is "serious concern'
By Joe Lopez
24 April 2002
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
International Monetary Fund chief Horst Koehler has called
on the Japanese government to speed up the implementation of economic
reforms in order to revive its deteriorating economy.
Speaking on the eve of last weekends IMF and Group of
Seven meetings in Washington, Koehler said the Japanese economic
situation was of serious concern and criticised the
Koizumi government for the delays in carrying out economic reforms.
There is now hope that the recession is bottoming out.
But the return to a growth performance that corresponds to Japans
size and potential demands decisive action for the disposal of
non-performing loans, industrial deregulation and restructuring
of its banking and corporate sector. Japans ongoing recession
is still a drag on global growth, in particular on activity in
the region, Koehler said.
Koehlers comments echo sentiments expressed in the IMFs
semi-annual World Economic Outlook report released last week.
It warned that the combination of deflation and structural
problems was a serious concern necessitating
additional monetary easing and aggressive structural reform.
Pressure is mounting on the Koizumi administration to push
ahead with plans to resolve the mounting bad debt problems in
the banking sector and to initiate structural reforms throughout
the economy. This includes reigning in the mounting public debt,
which stands at 130 percent of Gross Domestic Product, the highest
in the industrialised world.
It has been a year since Koizumi came to power pledging to
restructure the economy, eliminate the bad debt problems in the
banking sector and reduce public spending and debt, but so far
little has been done.
In fact, in the eyes of its critics in the international financial
markets, the Koizumi government is looking like its predecessorsissuing
pledges to carry out reforms but implementing very
little.
In a statement issued earlier this month, the Japanese Cabinet
Office offered an upbeat assessment. While the economy was still
in a severe situation, it said, the recession was
showing signs of bottoming out due to the growth in exports.
But the increase in exports is largely the result of a fall
in the value of the yen. Critics of the government say that its
reliance on a rebound in overseas demand is a case of wishful
thinking and an excuse for not tackling reform measures. Moreover,
the recovery in the US and Europe, upon which the expansion of
Japanese exports depends, could prove to be fragile.
The governments hopes for a turnaround could be dashed
overnight by a rapid increase in the price of oil, touched off
by a worsening of the crisis in the Middle East or the launching
of an attack on Iraq by the US.
A recent report by Osamu Tanaka and Robert Feldman of Morgan
Stanley in Tokyo examined the impact of an oil price of $40 per
barrel on the Japanese economy, which imports 90 percent of its
oil requirements.
A permanent shift in oil prices to that level, they said, would
squeeze corporate profits and then translate into a rollback of
capital spending. Then, as it becomes difficult for corporations
to absorb higher oil prices, firms are likely to start transferring
the burden to households by raising output prices and cutting
wages. Accordingly, with a decrease in purchasing power and income
conditions, consumers are likely to restrain spending.
According to their analysis, the resulting drag on the real
growth rate of gross domestic product would be - 0.8 percent for
2002 and -1.2 percent for 2003. This hit to growth,
they continued, would cause serious damage to the economy
since the long awaited recovery is only finally coming into view.
Deteriorating economy
Despite the claims of the government and some commentators
that the recession is bottoming out, and that an export-led recovery
is around the corner, a number of statistics point to a continued
economic deterioration.
Corporate bankruptcies in Japan rose for the third straight
month in March with an increase of 5.9 percent on a year-on-year
basis. The 2001 fiscal year, which closed on March 31, was the
second worst year for bankruptcies since 1984. Of particular note
were the collapses of general contracting firm Sato Kogyo with
debts of $3.41 billion and First Credit with liabilities of $1.97
billion. Both were listed on the Japanese stock exchange. The
2001 fiscal year saw 21 listed companies go bust compared to 15
in 2000.
A recent survey of large private companies by the Nihon Keizai
Shimbun showed that capital investment is expected to slump by
almost 13 percent on average in the 2002 fiscal year, the second
straight year of decline. The most affected areas include electronics,
autos and steel, which will slash manufacturing capital investment
by 10.7 percent. The non-manufacturing sectors are looking at
a 14.8 percent decline in investment.
Wholesale prices continue to drop, indicating that the economy
is still in the grip of deflation. Domestic wholesale prices fell
1.1 percent for the 2001 fiscal year, the fourth consecutive annual
decline. Prices of electrical machinery, including personal computers,
slumped by 5 percent largely due to the bursting of the information
technology bubble.
April saw Japan record its largest corporate loss in history.
The Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corp., the countrys largest
telecommunications carrier, posted a $6.5 billion loss for the
2001 fiscal year. NTT is set to write off more than $15 billion
from failed investments in other telecommunication companiesVerio
Inc. and AT & T in the United States and KPN NV of the Netherlands.
The company made huge investments in these firms at the height
of the tech stock bubble and suffered massive losses when it collapsed.
In the finance sector, the bad debt problems keep mounting.
A recent Financial Services Agency report indicated that a realistic
figure of bad debts held by the banks was a massive 37 trillion
yen or $283 billion.
The FSA report noted that although none of the top 13 banks
in Japan had fallen below required capital adequacy ratiosan
event that had been widely feared when new accounting laws came
into effect on March 31the nations banks were in intensive
care.
Credit rating agency Standard and Poors has scotched claims
that the economy has bottomed out and recovery is imminent. Last
week it cut Japans long-term local and foreign currency
rating by one notch from AA to AA-minus, giving Japan the lowest
credit rating of the G7 economies.
Announcing the downgrade, the agency said: We had hoped
that the Junichiro Koizumi administration would press for private
sector and governmental reform. But given the governments
falling popularity and the problems that have beset key ministers
and aides, Standard and Poors has lowered its expectations in
three key areas.
The three key areas are public debt, the bank sector and public
spending and deregulation. On public debt the agency said it expected
the government deficit to remain at around 8 percent of GDP for
several years. The deficit, coupled with weak economic growth
prospects, makes Japans fiscal stance unsustainable.
In the banking sector, the provision for bad loans was inadequate
and consequently, in the absence of proper capitalisation, the
financial sector will be reluctant to expand lending, thus hurting
growth and blunting monetary policy.
On the issue of cutting government spending and deregulating
the economy, Standard and Poors offered the following assessment:
The Koizumi administration is unlikely to trim pension and
health entitlements, or to open protected sectors to greater foreign
competition.
It seems that with its popularity sliding and an administration
wracked with conflicts and scandals, the Koizumi regime is no
longer regarded as either willing or able to carry out the Thatcher-style
program demanded by key sections of Japanese and international
capital.
See Also:
US belligerence encourages Japanese politician
to rattle the nuclear sabre against China
[22 April 2002]
Official figures show: Japan
in worst postwar recession
[18 March 2002]
Thumbs down on latest Japanese
economic package
[7 March 2002]
Economic hardship afflicts
Japanese working class
[14 January 2002]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |