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WSWS : News
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Economy : Asian
meltdown
US intervention cannot halt
Japan breakdown
By Nick Beams
19 June 1998
One week ago Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin was telling the
US Congress that no intervention would be undertaken to stop the
fall in the Japanese yen. It was up to the government in Tokyo
to take action, he insisted.
But just days later the US Federal Reserve Board joined with
Japanese financial authorities to organise a $6 billion bailout
to stop the plunge in the yen. What had changed in such a short
period?
When Japanese Prime Minister Hashimoto spoke to US president
Clinton late on Tuesday night to urge American intervention, the
signs of a global crash were clearly evident. The yen was in free
fall, having dropped from 141 to the dollar to 146, partly as
a response to Rubin's remarks, and was set to reach 150 in the
next 24 hours.
Fears were being expressed across Asia that the plunge of the
yen would set off a series of currency devaluations, sparking
a "second wave" financial crisis. Chinese authorities
had made it clear that their decision not to revalue the yuan
was being reconsidered in light of the yen's collapse and the
refusal of the major financial powers to halt it.
A devaluation of the yuan would almost certainly see the breaking
of the Hong Kong-US dollar peg, setting in motion a new round
of devaluations across the region -- an Asian beggar-thy-neighbour
currency war.
Just hours before Hashimoto's call, concerns over the global
consequences of the Asian crisis were articulated at a conference
in Australia. The World Bank's senior official for the Asian region,
Jean-Michel Severino, warned that all East Asian economies were
in a slump, and faced a contraction of up to 15 percent.
"We are talking about a major recession and probably a
depression in this part of the world. This depression may be very
long-lasting if one does not manage it very, very carefully."
His warnings were endorsed by Thai Commerce Minister and Deputy
Prime Minister Supachai Panitchpakdi who said the continued fall
of the yen could spark a global recession. "If the yen would
drop with no limit or bottom, then the second Asian crisis would
mean a first-world economic depression," he told reporters.
The plunge in the yen on Tuesday was accompanied by a sharp
fall on the stockmarket -- the Nikkei index tumbled below the
crucial 15,000 mark. The combined yen-Nikkei fall hit the Japanese
banks from two sides. With some 30 percent of the loans raised
by the banks denominated in dollars, every fall in the yen undermined
the solvency of the banking system. At the same time, the fall
in the Nikkei devalued the banks' share portfolios, further weakening
their financial position and threatening to put them under the
8 percent capital adequacy ratio demanded by the Bank for International
Settlements (BIS).
The increasingly perilous state of the entire banking system
is illustrated by the Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi, the world's largest
bank. In the wake of the 11 percent yen devaluation since March
it has seen its capital adequacy ratio drop from 8.52 to 8.2 percent,
very close to the level below which it would not be permitted
by the BIS to trade.
If the yen-Nikkei slide had continued at the same rate as on
Monday and Tuesday -- and there was nothing to indicate that it
would slacken -- then it would have only been a matter of time,
possibly only a few days, before bankruptcies of major companies,
banks and financial institutions were announced. Intervention
on the markets was needed to prevent a major financial crisis.
No doubt in pressing for such action, Hashimoto would have
warned Clinton of the global consequences of a financial collapse
in Japan. His point would undoubtedly have been pressed home by
the 200 point fall in the Dow Jones index on Monday, amid signs
that the US stockmarket was beginning to feel the effects of the
deepening Asian crisis.
The US-Japan intervention has quelled the immediate turmoil
in the markets, but the fundamental problems remain and are worsening
by the day.
Already market observers are warning that the effects of the
US intervention will rapidly wear off and the yen could resume
its slide as early as next week. Within 24 hours, the London-based
Financial Times, in one of a series of editorials on the
Japan-Asia crisis, warned that "policies that simply buy
time will not pre-empt deflation in Japan" and that "without
decisive action, disaster lies ahead."
Japan and Asia
The threatened meltdown in Japan is intimately bound up with
the crisis in the rest of East Asia -- the full extent of which
is only now coming to light.
Since the collapse of the Thai baht last July, the five most
affected countries -- South Korea, Thailand, Indonesia, Malaysia
and the Philippines -- have experienced a capital outflow of around
$115 billion, an amount equivalent to 10 percent of their combined
Gross Domestic Product. In addition, bank credits have been reduced
by $88 billion, amounting to 8 percent of GDP. This means these
countries have suffered a withdrawal of funds equivalent to 18
percent of GDP virtually overnight.
The expected contraction in overall economic activity ranges
from around 4 or 5 percent for Korea and Malaysia to as much as
15 or 20 percent for Indonesia.
The Asian banking failure is one of the biggest in world financial
history. According to calculations by the Morgan Guaranty Trust
Company the funds required to recapitalise the banking system
in Japan, Indonesia and Malaysia amount to 20 percent of GDP and
as much as 30 percent of GDP in Thailand and South Korea. This
compares with a recapitalisation of 4-5 percent of GDP for the
US during the savings and loans crisis from 1984 to 1991 and 12-15
percent of GDP for Mexico in 1995-97.
The debt burden of the Japanese banking system, estimated to
be at least $600 billion, has rendered ineffective all attempts
by the Japanese government to stimulate the economy through increased
public works spending.
The theory behind such interventions is that as increased government
spending stimulates the economy, businesses will increase their
investment, thereby providing an additional stimulus, resulting
in further investment and expanded economic activity. In Japan,
however, this virtuous circle has failed to materialise because
the banks, weighed down by non-performing loans, are unable to
provide the funds necessary for increased investment. Consequently,
the stimulus rapidly peters out.
This is why even as the country's largest ever recovery program
passed through parliament this week, it was written off as providing
at best only a temporary boost to the economy.
Even the Bank of Japan downplayed the impact of the $117 billion
package. Its implementation was "assumed to boost demand
through additional public works and special income tax deduction,"
the bank said, but these "positive effects of the fiscal
policy may be weakened, if the ongoing rapid deterioration in
employment and income conditions further dampens the overall economic
activities."
The Clinton administration, together with the governments of
the European powers, has demanded that Tokyo take action to wipe
out the crippling bad debts and "restructure" the banking
system.
Accordingly, the intervention to rescue the yen was accompanied
by a statement from Rubin that the US was looking forward to "the
implementation of a comprehensive action program that will create
the conditions that are essential for a healthy and prosperous
economy."
Hashimoto replied that Japan would "expeditiously restructure
the financial system, including the prompt disposal of bad assets."
But, as usual, the diplomatic exchanges did not even touch
on the real implications and consequences of a "restructure"
of the Japanese banking system and the elimination of bad debts.
The extent of the bad debt is unprecedented in world financial
history -- roughly equivalent of the GDP of France. To eliminate
it means a program of bank closures, the shutting down of insurance
companies and other financial institutions, the forced sale of
land, building and other assets, the closure or amalgamation of
industrial firms and corporations. Unemployment, already at a
post-war high of more than 4 percent, would soar to double-digit
levels.
In short, "restructuring" of the banks means plunging
Japan into a recession not seen since the 1930s, and unleashing
a far-reaching social crisis.
This is why the Japanese government has been so resistant to
the demands of the US and its European allies. But, as the events
of this week show, time is running out and Japan is heading into
a breakdown, the consequences of which will reverberate throughout
the world economy.
See Also:
A Marxist analysis of the Asian
meltdown [50k PDF]
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