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Japan heads into deflationary spiral
By Joe Lopez
30 January 2002
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With Japan moving into its third recession in 10 years there
are growing fears that the worlds second largest economy
is being dragged into a deflationary spiral of falling prices
and profits.
In a major address earlier this month, Bank of Japan governor
Masaura Hayami said he expected that the Japanese economy would
remain in a severe state as prices continued to fall. This
year, the economic and industrial structural reform will move
into full swing. In that process, low growth and price falls will
inevitably continue. But preventing it from leading to a deflationary
spiral will pose a significant policy challenge, he told
Bank of Japan managers in Tokyo.
Hayamis comments follow an earlier bleak assessment by
the Japanese Cabinet Office. It said the economy would show no
growth next fiscal year and would grow no more than 1.6 percent
a year for the next four years. The Cabinet Office predicts a
probable contraction of 0.9 percent for the fiscal year ending
in March.
As the Economist magazine commented: The gloomy
statistics continue to accumulate. On January 25 new figures showed
that prices in Japan [fell] for the third year in a rowunprecedented
for a major industrial economy in modern times. Official data
released on January 24 showed a 38.3 percent fall in the Japanese
trade surplus for 2001, the largest fall since 1970 and the third
successive year of decline. The Japanese governments own
forecasts show that the economy will not grow at all in the fiscal
year starting in April, with unemployment continuing to rise,
to 5.6 percent. ... It would be hard to exaggerate the extent
of Japans economic problems.
Every economic statistic points in the same direction. Figures
on corporate bankruptcies, published by the private research firm
Teikoku Databank, show that 2001 was the second worst year in
post-war Japan. A total of 19,441 companies went to the wall,
an increase of 1.9 percent from the previous year and the largest
number since 1984. Because Teikokus figures only cover business
failures with liabilities of 10 million-yen or more, the real
situation is even worse as small business bankruptcies are not
accounted for.
The release of the figures prompted an editorial comment in
the Financial Times entitled Bankrupt Japan.
It noted that there were few worse combinations for Japanese companies
than the falling prices and stagnant growth they have experienced
over the past few years as they have had to service their
loans with ever-falling revenues.
Deflation lies at the root of Japans problem. It
ensures high levels of bankruptcy and low consumer demand, which,
in turn, put further downward pressure on prices. Unless luck
intervenes or policies change radically, the prospect of Japan
escaping its deflationary spiral is bleak.
The figure for bankruptcies would have been far higher, but
for the proposed bailout of Japans biggest retailer Daiei
Inc. The $3.2 billion rescue of Daiei by its major lenders is
conditional on the selling off of its hotels, restaurants and
other non-core businesses.
In total 6,000 jobs will be destroyed as part of the plan.
One thousand workers will be cut from its retail stores and 5,000
jobs will be axed through the selling of its subsidiaries. The
bailout plan apparently has the blessing of Prime Minister Junichiro
Koizumi because of government fears that the total collapse of
the corporation, which employs 100,000 people, could cause social
damage and financial instability.
Pressure for economic reform
But Koizumis support for the bailout has come under fire
from financial interests fearful that the governments talk
of the need to press ahead with structural reform and a resolution
of the bad debt crisis is just thattalk.
A recent article in the Daily Yomiuri entitled Koizumi
needs fiscal shot to ring round the world noted that, after
the September 11 terrorist attack in the US, Tokyos stock
index rose on a day when it might have been expected to plummet.
Why did the Nikkei move up? What could explain the breath
of life in an otherwise flat and dreadfully stale Japanese economy?
Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi and his colleagues of the Liberal
Democratic Party should have called a Diet hearing to investigate.
Or perhaps the Prime Ministers economic policy czar, Heiko
Takenaka, should have attempted some explanation as to why Japans
stock index seemed to have power past the shock of the days
earlier traumatic events.
What triggered this shiver of hope was the bankruptcy
of Japans third largest retailer, Mycal Corp. Rather than
prolonging by sleight of hand its insolvency, Mycal forced a real
and transparent reconciliation of its deteriorating assets and
accumulating debts.
Contrasting the support given to Daiei by the government and
the banks, the article said that Mycals actions had earned
the applause and support of the markets. This is the shot
that should ring loudly through the halls of Nagatacho and Kasumigaseki,
and frankly, throughout Japan.
The article concluded that, despite his slick veneer
as a reformer and rhetoric that he would protect no sacred
cows, Koizumi had so far failed utterly to make
market forces his friend in changing the course of the nations
economy.
Pressure is also being applied by the United States. On his
recent visit to Tokyo, US treasury secretary Paul ONeill
emphasised the necessity of pressing ahead with the economic reforms
and not pursuing a policy of lowering the value of yen to try
to boost exports and promote recovery.
The straight fact is this: exchange rates cannot improve
productivity or fix non-performing loans. The weight of historical
evidence shows that those who have tried to fix underlying economic
problems with protectionist measuresand I count artificially
depreciating the currency as one of thoseactually weaken
their own economy, he said.
ONeill was responding to criticisms from within the US
that the Bush administration was silently acquiescing in moves
to push down the value of the yen and improve Japans export
position. As Frank Vargo of the US National Association of Manufacturers
put it prior to ONeills visit: We want the Treasury
not to be as silent as Japan intervenes to talk down the yen.
The US has said nothing and the financial market has taken this
as consent.
Japanese government spokesmen have responded by saying that
in principle there is no government intervention and
that recent currency movements are occurring where we have
no involvement.
Amid continuing warnings about the long-term outlook, attention
in the short-term will be focused on the banks. Under measures
introduced by Koizumi, they will have to disclose the real extent
of bad loans in reports published for the end of the fiscal year
on March 31.
This has prompted warnings that the disclosure of the real
level of bad debt could set off a wave of corporate failures and
banking collapses in the following year. However, such fears were
discounted by IMF first deputy managing director, Anne Krueger,
who said last week that she did not see a crisis looming in Japan.
According to the Economist, reflecting the views of
large sections of the financial markets both in Japan and internationally,
perhaps this is not really good news. Given Japans
longstanding inability to respond effectively to chronic stagnation,
it may take a crisis to get Japans politicians to take the
painful and inevitably unpopular steps needed to pull Japan out
of the mire.
Such prescriptions are advocated on a virtual daily basis in
the financial press. But the advocates of shock therapy,
whose policies wreaked havoc in the former Soviet Union and Eastern
Europe, have never explained how their program of corporate bankruptcies,
the destruction of millions of jobs and sweeping cuts to the living
standards of the Japanese working class will bring a return to
economic prosperity.
See Also:"
Economic hardship afflicts Japanese working
class
[14 January 2002]
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