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WSWS : News
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Economy : Asian
meltdown
Recession hits Japan
What's behind global "economic schizophrenia"?
By Nick Beams
16 June 1998
The world economy seems to be afflicted by a severe case of
schizophrenia. On the one hand the United States, according to
official accounts, is enjoying continued economic growth, low
inflation, unprecedented wealth creation and falling unemployment.
On the other, conditions in Japan, the world's second largest
economic entity, are openly described as similar to the 1930s
Depression.
In testimony to the US Congress last week, Federal Reserve
Board chairman Alan Greenspan claimed that the US was enjoying
a "virtuous circle" in which rising equity values --
the stockmarket boom -- were providing the impetus for spending
and the expansion of output, employment and productivity-enhancing
capital investment.
"The current economic performance" he declared, "with
its combination of strong growth and low inflation, is as impressive
as any I have witnessed in my near half-century of daily observation
of the American economy."
Barely 36 hours after this upbeat assessment, national accounts
figures revealed that the Japanese economy had contracted at an
annualised rate of 5.3 percent in the first quarter of this year,
putting it into an official recession following the 1.3 percent
per annum decline in the last quarter of 1997.
What is to account for this divergence? Has the US become a
"new economy" in which low inflation combined with technological
advances have, to use Greenspan's phrase, enabled it to move "beyond
history" or, is the economic split personality, like schizophrenia,
the outward manifestation of a deep disorder in the organism as
a whole?
Let us review in more detail the nature of the Japanese slump
and its connection to the global economy and the US stockmarket
boom.
The release of the Japanese figures sent a shock wave through
financial markets as the yen fell to a new seven-year low of 144
to the US dollar, bringing its decline over the past two months
to 11 percent, and its decline since April 1995 to 80 percent.
A further decline to 150 to the dollar is expected rapidly,
with a drop to at least 170 over the next few months, if not weeks.
Some analysts have even predicted that the Japanese currency will
fall to 240.
The yen decline, even more than the announcement of recession,
brought warnings of a global crisis. The deputy prime minister
of Thailand, Supachai Panitchpakdi said excessive falls could
lead to a global depression. The major international powers had
to ensure that Asia does not "slide in a second Asian crisis
... because a second crisis in Asia will become the first worldwide
crisis."
Speaking to a Stockholm International Peace Research Institute
conference last Thursday, international financier George Soros
warned of a "breakdown of the entire system" if the
crisis in Asia were not resolved. Japan, he said, was already
suffering from conditions reminiscent of the 1930s, while the
IMF's programs in Asia had failed to address underlying structural
problems caused by the insolvency of the banks.
But even as the latest yen slide began, US Treasury Secretary
Robert Rubin made it clear there would be no international intervention,
bluntly telling Congress that the "weakness of the yen reflects
the economic conditions in Japan, and can only be remedied by
restoring economic strength in Japan."
But that is very much easier said than done.
According to Nobuya Nemota, the senior economist at the Tokyo-based
Nomura Research Institute: "We already have most of the necessary
conditions for the recession to become a depression. We have a
fragile banking system, a credit crunch, falling corporate earnings,
companies are pushing wages down, that is dampening demand, and
prices are falling -- this is the prototype of a depressionary
spiral.
"A crash on Wall Street now may be enough to cause the
recession to become a depression. The worst of the adjustment
may not be behind us; it may be ahead of us."
In addition to the national accounts figures, other statistics
indicate the depth of the Japanese decline. Bankruptcies have
increased 37.5 percent over the last year, reaching their highest
level in May since the end of World War II. The Ministry of International
Trade and Industry has reported that Japanese manufacturers plan
to spend 4.4 percent less on plant and equipment in the current
fiscal year, the first decline in four years.
The banking crisis is moving from bad to worse. According to
Moody's Investor Services there are at least 13 Japanese banks
which may require government assistance. This financial crisis
is being exacerbated by the decline of the stockmarket as the
Nikkei Index hovers around 15,000 -- some 20 percent below the
level the government considers necessary. At its peak in late
1989 the index stood at almost 39,000.
The "conventional wisdom" has been that in order
to revive the Japanese economy, the government must not only provide
a fiscal stimulus through additional spending and reduced taxes
but should initiate a process of restructuring. However, even
bourgeois economists are coming to admit this would worsen the
situation.
As the economic columnist for the London-based Financial
Times Martin Wolf put it: "What would happen if greater
deregulation, increased competition and greater transparency swept
through the economy? Equity and land prices would fall; concealed
losses would be revealed; unemployment would soar; pension funds
would founder; banks and insurance companies would collapse; and,
not least, the desired return on investment would jump.
"What would be the net result? In the short to medium
term, uncertainty would increase and much planned investment would
be eliminated. The former would lead to higher desired savings
than today; the latter would result in a collapse in investment.
The result would be slide from stagnation to slump."
The Japanese stagnation is already threatening to set off a
"second wave" Asian crisis. Japan has been a major market
for East Asia but in the past three months its imports from the
region fell by 20 percent. The Japanese banks have been withdrawing
from the region and firms are cutting back on investment. Direct
investment is expected to decline by 42 percent this year, following
a 67 percent increase in 1997.
But the most immediate fears stem from the decline of the yen.
In Korea, where major manufacturing firms in shipping, cars and
electronics, compete directly with their Japanese counterparts
in world markets, the decline of the yen last week precipitated
the largest ever single day fall on the Korean stockmarket.
Across the region governments are nervously watching to see
whether China will cut the value of the yuan in order to retain
its position in the global struggle for export markets. The governor
of China's central bank has already warned that the falling yen
is affecting China -- remarks which have been interpreted as meaning
the yuan may be devalued if the yen slide continues.
According to some estimates, the yuan is presently over-valued
by 20 percent and the Hong Kong dollar by 50 percent. The fear
is that a Chinese devaluation will set off a 1930s-style beggar-thy-neighbour
currency war across Asia.
Echoes of 1929
Even this brief review of the nature and extent of the Asian
crisis, places the US economic boom in its global context. The
present situation has its historical antecedents.
In the latter part of the 1920s world economic conditions,
especially commodity prices, had begun to turn down sharply before
the sharemarket collapse on Wall Street in October 1929. Well
before that, commodity-producing regions such as Australia and
Latin America had experienced a decline in prices, and recession
was spreading to Central Europe.
The United States, however, continued to enjoy a boom as capital
seeking a safe haven and higher rates of return made its way to
Wall Street. Eventually, however, economic expansion in the United
States ran up against the gathering world recession, resulting
in the collapse on Wall Street and the onset of the Great Depression.
Its social and economic consequences were most severe in the
United States precisely because, far from freeing itself from
the rest of the world, the very dynamism and productivity of the
American economy made it more dependent than any other on an expanding
world market.
History does not repeat itself but the present situation has
parallels with the 1920s. While the US dollar has been surging
to new highs on international markets, across the border, the
Canadian dollar, along with the currencies of other commodity-producing
countries such as Australia and New Zealand, together with the
oil-dependent Russian rouble, has undergone a precipitous decline
-- a clear indication of a gathering world slump.
The record bull run on Wall Street has been financed to a considerable
extent by the influx of funds into US Treasury bonds from Japan.
With official interest rates kept down, mutual funds -- whose
finances now rival those of the banks -- have invested in Wall
Street, pushing the market ever upwards.
As a consequence the Dow Jones index is four times higher than
it was six years ago, while the value of assets and stocks has
increased by about $12 trillion since the end of 1994 -- the largest
accumulation of wealth in the history of the United States. But
this record accumulation is not matched by real economic expansion.
In fact, growth rates throughout the 1990s have been between 2
and 3 cent, below the levels achieved in the years of post-war
economic expansion.
This discrepancy has led to the conclusion in some quarters
that the United States has become a "new economy" in
which the increase in wealth and productivity is greater than
that measured by the usual statistics.
Such assertions also have historical precedents. In words which
could well have been uttered by Greenspan as he gave his congressional
testimony last week, Forbes magazine declared in June 1929:
"For the last five years we have been in a new industrial
era in this country. We are making progress industrially and economically
not even by leaps and bounds, but on a perfectly heroic scale."
The unprecedented stock market boom in the United States, the
rapid plunge of the Japanese economy into slump and the growing
Asian malaise are not separate economic processes, but contradictory
expressions of the deepening crisis of the world capitalist economy
as a whole.
See Also:
A Marxist analysis of the Asian
meltdown [50k PDF]
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