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OECD predicts bleak outlook for Japanese economy
By Joe Lopez
6 December 2002
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The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
(OECD) has painted a grim picture of Japans economic prospects
and called on the government to accelerate economic restructuring.
According to the OECD Economic Survey of Japan released last
month: [The] Japanese economy remains in a serious deflationary
situation even while experiencing a cyclical recovery phase in
mid-2002, underpinned by inventory correction and a sharp pick
up in exports. But the recovery is too narrowly based to represent
a break with the pattern of generally low growth experienced through
the 1990s.... All in all the economy may grow by only around 1
percent per annum to the end of 2004 with deflation continuing.
Referring to Japans dependency on exports, particularly
to the US, the OECD warned: The balance of risk is now on
the downside given signs of slower growth in the world economy
and the possibility of a further deterioration in financial conditions,
which might lead to a worsening of deflation.
The report commented: Japan is faced with a formidable
task of managing a transition from the system that once worked
well but is now ill-adapted to a changing environment. Reforming
that system is politically difficult because of well-entrenched
vested interests. Those opposing reform must realise that there
is no alternative to revitalising the economy through structural
reform efforts and that there is no more time to be wasted.
The OECDs remedy is the same as it has advocated over
the past decade: a sweeping restructuring of the highly indebted
Japanese financial system, the deregulation of the domestic economy
and the further undermining of the conditions of Japanese workers.
Such shock therapy would lead rapidly to the bankruptcy
of thousands of unprofitable companies and the destruction of
millions of jobs.
Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi took office last year, pledging
to carry out far-reaching economic restructuring, but has since
backed off and resorted to the pump-priming measures of his predecessors.
In late November, the government announced another mini-budget
aimed at increasing spending on public projects, providing a safety
net for small businesses and the unemployed and shoring up declining
tax revenues. The stimulus package allocated 1.5 trillion yen
($US12 billion) for public works and another 1.5 trillion yen
for the unemployed, although no details were specified.
The package has been widely ridiculed. It will increase public
debt, which is already running at around 150 percent of GDP and
threatening to trigger a further downgrade by credit rating agencies
of Japans sovereign debt. The amounts being laid out will
have little impact on the countrys high levels of unemployment.
Even if the number had an extra zero at the end and was
10 times the amount, getting out of deflation isnt possible
with just public works, stated one economic analyst.
A host of statistics point to Japans intractable economic
crisis and the immense difficulties that already confront millions
of Japanese families. Following the release of the OECD report,
the Bank of Japan downgraded its outlook for the Japanese economy
for the first time in 11 months, due to a slump in exports and
falling industrial production. Industrial production declined
0.3 percent in September.
The Bank of Japan announced that although the economy had stabilised
as a whole, there is greater uncertainty towards recovery
and signs that domestic demand exports were losing their
momentum. Consumer prices continue to decline, falling 0.7
percent in November on a year-on-year basis for a record 38 straight
months.
Unemployment is continuing to grow, as companies scale back
hiring and replace full-time jobs with casual, part-time and short-term
contracts. Japans official unemployment rate rose to a post-World
War II high of 5.5 percent in October. Unemployment for men jumped
to an all-time high of 5.9 percent and for women to 5.1 percent,
up from 4.9 percent in September. The official number of people
out of work rose to 3.62 million in October, up 100,000 from a
year earlier and the 19th consecutive monthly increase.
These official unemployment figures are severely understated.
According to a recent government report, some 1.99 million people,
who were out of work between July and September, were not included
in the official jobless statistics because they were deemed to
have stopped looking for a job.
According to a recent report in the Yomiuri Shimbun,
those who have lost jobs because of corporate restructuring and
bankruptcies increased by 390,000 from a year earlier to 1.53
million. The number of jobless men aged between 35 and 44, the
main breadwinner in most Japanese families, grew by 60,000 from
a year earlier.
Among the employed, the number of permanent employees,
mainly regular company workers, declined by 660,000 from a year
earlier, falling for a record 15th consecutive month. But the
number of company employees on contracts lasting less than a month,
who are easy targets of corporate employment adjustments, rose
440,000 from a year earlier, the report stated.
Describing the current scenario facing companies with falling
prices, profits and declining consumer demand, Masahi Murata,
an economist at UFJ Institute, commented: Companies had
no choice but to cut more jobs and wages because their profits
were so meagre under the current economy.... Workers, for their
part, continued to worry about their future and job security and
had no inclination to spend freely.
Consumption by working class families accounts for about 60
percent of total consumer spending, which in turn is approximately
60 percent of Gross Domestic Product. The income of wage and salary
earners is falling, however, due to cutbacks to bonuses, overtime
and unemployment. The average monthly income of such households
fell 1.6 percent and the amount of disposable income decreased
1.4 percent. With workers concerned about the worsening situation,
spending by wage-earning households fell 0.7 percent in October
from a year earlier.
See Also:
Financial markets criticise
Japanese bank plan
[8 November 2002]
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