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: Japan
Koizumi promises a plan as debt problems deepen
By Joe Lopez
26 February 2002
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In the lead-up to the visit by US president Bush last week,
the Japanese government called for a plan to address the problem
of deflation and bad debts in the banking system. But no one believes
that the latest announcement is going to resolve the mounting
problems of the Japanese economy.
Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi instructed the Council on
Economic and Fiscal Policy to devise a plan to address four main
areas, including the speeding up of the disposal of non-performing
loans held by the debt-ridden Japanese banks and a further easing
of monetary policy by the Bank of Japan.
Details of the plan are to be released at the end of the month.
However the money markets have reacted negatively, calling it
a stop-gap measure and simply an attempt by the administration
to create the impression that it is pressing ahead with reforms.
This is the same old stuff that gets dragged out every
single time. Weve heard it again and again. Nothing ever
changes, Shinji Nomura from Daiwa Securities commented.
A comprehensive economic support package,
and they throw it together the week before a visit from President
Bush, lamented Tsuyoshi Segawa from Shinko Securities.
Recent data plus a threat from the credit rating agency Moodys
Investors Service point to deepening problems in the Japanese
economy.
Moodys has announced it is considering downgrading Japans
domestic currency credit rating by as much as two notches to Aa2.
In the words of a recent article in the Financial Times,
this would knock Japan out of the G-7 league and place it
at the same level as Latvia and Greece, and below Botswana and
the Bahamas.
Japan experienced a 0.5 per cent decline in Gross Domestic
Product (GDP) for the third quarter last year. This is its third
recession in less than a decade and many analysts believe this
one will be the longest.
Corporate bankruptcies again rose in January for the fifth
consecutive month in a financial year which will see a record
number of companies go bust.
According to Tokyo Shoko Research, a total of 1,543 companies
collapsed last month, an increase of 10.6 percent from a year
earlier, with liabilities of 1.43 trillion yen ($10.8 billion).
One of the most significant failures was the Sogo Shinkin Bank,
the fifth largest credit union in the Osaka area. Its collapse
is said to have been a product of the fall in real estate and
land prices and lending associated with the bubble economy of
the 1980s.
Shokusan Jutaku Sogo Co, a large home building firm, also filed
for bankruptcy with debts of 13.5 billion yen. It has become a
victim of the decrease in housing starts, which fell to an 18-year
low in 2001.
Approximately 16,000 workers were employed by companies that
went bankrupt in January. The number of workers losing their jobs
through corporate collapses continued at a rate of over 15,000
for the fifth consecutive month.
The Finance Ministry announced last week that Japans
current account surplus in 2001 fell 12 percent from the previous
year, marking the first fall in two years. Exports fell 5.9 percent
for the year, mainly due to the global slump in the information
technology sector.
Against the backdrop of this economic news and skepticism about
Koizumis latest economic measures, Bush urged the administration
to press ahead with reform plans and expressed confidence in Koizumi.
Im confident in this mans leadership ability;
Im confident in his strategy and Im confident in his
desire to implement that strategy, Bush told a Tokyo press
conference.
Following his discussions with Koizumi, Bush was even more
fulsome in his praise. It takes somebody whos willing
to spend capitalthe political capitalto get the agenda
done. So my main focus of this meeting was to judge intent and
desire and willingness to work hard to achieve a bold agenda.
And having listened to the prime minister at length today and
looked him in the eye, I feel very confident that thats
precisely what he is going to dopursue a bold agenda.
However the money markets are far from convinced and there
was criticism of Bush for being soft on the Japanese leadership
for its failure to tackle the vested interests in the Liberal
Democratic Party that are blocking the so-called reform process.
A measure of the growing frustration in these circles was provided
in comments by Morgan Stanley Dean Witter analyst Barton Biggs.
Describing himself as bored and baffled by the frozen paralysis
in Japan, he said: I am so analysis saturated, so
jaded, that I just skim it. I have heard it all before and nothing
ever really happens anyway. Once upon a time, I fantasised that
Prime Minister Koizumi was an economic messiah like Thatcher or
Reagan who would lead Japan out of the wilderness. That dream
is fading fast.
As the hopes of the financial markets for a turnaround fade,
the financial problems are continuing to grow, posing dangers
for the stability of the world economy as a whole.
As an article in the latest issue of the leading US foreign
policy journal Foreign Affairs put it: Japan is approaching
its financial limits. Government debt already exceeds 130 percent
of GDP. Add in other liabilities such as unfunded pensions, other
public-sector debts, and contingent liabilities such as government
guarantees for troubled medium-sized companies then the number
grows to well above 300 percent of GDP. Goldman Sachs vice
chairman for Asia estimated debt to be above 400 percent. Such
debt is bearable now only because of Japans interest rates,
which hover near zero. By mid-decade, if Tokyos current
policies are continued, interest rates will begin to rise as they
incorporate substantial risk premiums. At that point, Japans
economy will simply collapse, possibly taking much of the Asian
and world economies with it.
See Also:
Share market fall deepens Japan's banking
crisis
[14 February 2002]
Japan heads into deflationary
spiral
[30 January 2002]
Economic hardship afflicts
Japanese working class
[14 January 2002]
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