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WSWS : News
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: Japan
Official figures show: Japan in worst postwar recession
By Joe Lopez
18 March 2002
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International Monetary Fund (IMF) managing director Horst Koehler
last week gave an upbeat assessment of the world economy claiming
recession had been avoided and recovery was on its way. Much still
rested on the performance of the US, where there were mixed signals,
but overall picture was one of recovery.
The European economy would also strengthen, he said, although
its recovery would lag behind the US. However, the IMF chief made
no comment on the worlds second largest economy, Japan,
which stands in stark contrast to the optimistic forecasts for
the US and Europe.
Just prior to Koehlers remarks, the government announced
that Japan had recorded a 1.2 percent contraction for the final
quarter of 2001, higher than the expected 1.0 percent decline
forecast by the government and economists. The annualised fall
of 4.5 percent was also higher than the 4.0 percent previously
forecast.
This contraction means that the economy has experienced three
quarters of consecutive decline for the first time in almost a
decade. The last time the economy shrank for three consecutive
quarters was 1993, but then the contractions were limited to less
than 0.1 percent each quarter.
The current recession is the worst in the postwar period with
analysts blaming a massive 12 percent plunge in business investment,
stagnant consumer demand and continuing deflationary pressures.
The decline in business investment was the worst since 1980.
There does not appear to be any relief in sight. Wholesale
prices fell 1.3 percent in February on a year-by-year basis representing
the 17th straight month of decline. Although there was a rise
in consumer spending of 1.9 percent for the final quarter of 2001
this was not seen as a sign of recovery but was attributed to
one-off seasonal factors. Consumer spending is expected to stagnate
or even fall in the current quarter.
Commenting on the outlook for domestic spending, Nobuhiro Okuyama,
a research director at Mitsubishi Research Institute said: High
unemployment rates and falling incomes might curb it during the
first quarter of this year. Bonuses for salary workers declined
in December and companies are still not slowing the pace of corporate
restructuring. Those factors could all mean domestic demand remains
at its current weak level.
Business investment also continued to fall as evidenced by
the 4.6 percent fall in bank lending in February, the 50th consecutive
monthly drop. The Koizumi government does not see any relief and
is projecting zero economic growth for the coming financial year
starting on April 1.
The recent surge in the stock marketthe Nikkei index
has been hovering around 12,000 after hitting a low in February
of 9,420has led to some claims that a recovery may be on
the way. But most observers maintain that the rise in the Nikkei
has more to do with strengthening the position of the banks than
any upturn.
Banks, which hold large share portfolios as security on loans,
are required to report their financial position before March 31
and value their share holdings at current market prices.
Describing the Nikkei surge as the most unlikely of bull
markets, a recent article in the Australian Financial
Review pointed out that the parlous state of the banks
loans portfolios was the real reason for the upturn.
Many of these loans are non-performing. Most hold real
estate as collateral, which has slumped 70 percent in value since
the bursting of the Japanese bubble in the late 1980s. The towering
burden of these loans could put some of Japans major banks
in a position where they are unable to meet global rules on the
level of capital reserves to offset failing loans.
Japans banks are huge holders of shares, so a simple
way to avoid this scenario would be to pump up the value of their
capital base. In other words, the stock market rally may help
prevent a number of Japanese banks being declared technically
insolvent soon after the new fiscal year.
Another factor in the recent rise in the stock market is the
government clamp down on short selling of sharesthe practice
of selling borrowed shares in the expectation that they can be
bought back at a lower price in the future.
One of the mechanisms through which the stock market is being
propped up and the banks kept solvent is the injection of money
from the governments pension funds. Officials from the Government
Pension Investment Fund have announced the fund will buy 1.7 trillion
yen ($13 billion) worth of Japanese stocks and 3 trillion yen
in foreign stocks and bonds and that a further 9 trillion yen
will be invested next financial year.
The fund, which is said by analysts to be seriously under funded
in terms of the governments pension liabilities, currently
controls around $276 billion. As of December 2001, the pension
fund had 43 percent invested in high-risk areas and from April
1 plans to invest 50 percent of new funds in high-risk investments.
But in the first three quarters of the current fiscal year
the pension fund has already lost some 925 billion yen.
Not only do Japanese workers face the prospect of the government
gambling away their retirement funds in a bid to prop up the banks,
they could also lose their savings if a bank goes under.
From April 1 this year, the government will limit its liability
for certificates of deposit held at banks to $77,000 if a bank
collapses. From April 1, 2003, the same limit will apply for ordinary
savings accounts. This has led to many people buying up gold bullion
as a safe haven for their money.
The threat of banking failures is a real one, as was underscored
by the recent bankruptcy of Chubu Bank, a second tier regional
bank established in 1916. With the fragility of the banking sector
becoming increasingly apparent and the government moves to remove
full deposit coverage, worried customers could start withdrawing
their funds, possibly leading to a run on the banks.
See Also:
Thumbs down on latest Japanese economic
package
[7 March 2002]
Koizumi promises a plan as
debt problems deepen
[26 February 2002]
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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