Second/final part POLICY RESPONSE
In addition to measures the Ministry of Finance has taken to boost the Japanese economy, primarily lowering interest rates, the Japanese government has adopted a number of fiscal stimulus packages. In 1992, the ruling Liberal Democratic Party and Japan's leading business organizations grew concerned over the course of the economy and fashioned two economic stimulus packages to boost the economy. (For a detailed account of the measures the Japanese government has adopted since 1991 to spark the economy, see appendix B.) The five stimulus packages Japan has adopted since 1991 rely heavily on advancing public works projects ahead of schedule and on making low-interest rate loans available to small and medium-size businesses to spark an economic recovery rather than on providing any new government spending. Indeed, critics argue that the stimulative packages contain little, if any, real new spending.
Also, as Japan's Nikkei index of stock market prices tumbled below the 15,000 mark, the government intervened unofficially, but unmistakably, by discouraging securities firms from selling securities and by prodding pension fund managers into buying stocks to shore up the stock market and to aid Japan's banking and securities industries.(18) Japanese banks and securities firms aided and actively participated in the stock and land speculation because it enhanced their own asset bases.
18. Estimates indicate that the government has invested at least 8 trillion yen ($70.8 billion) in public pension and postal life insurance funds to shore up stock market prices. Stock Slide Reflects Finance Ministry's Growing Ineffectiveness With Business. The Nikkei Weekly, January 17, 1994. p. 5.
Japanese banks and securities firms own substantial amounts of real estate and corporate stocks, which are counted as part of their assets.(19) As stock and real estate values soared, the banks and securities firms also saw their assets swell in nominal value, which they then used to finance additional activities. When the values of real estate and securities plummeted, however, securities firms and banks saw their own asset bases shrink, placing much of their core business activities at risk. Japanese banks were pummelled further by rising defaults on many of the large numbers of real estate loans they had made. Although accurate estimates are difficult to obtain, some analysts estimate that Japan's banks presently have roughly $260-$300 billion in bad real estate debts to work off, with more debts accruing as the recession lingers.(20)
19. Institutional ownership of corporate shares, which are rarely traded, accounts for about 65 percent of all outstanding shares. Viner, Aron. Inside Japanese Financial Markets. Illinois, Dow Jones-Irwin, 1988. p. 121.
20. Japanese Banks: Tough on the Taxpayer. The Economist, February 26, 1994. p. 74-75.
As industrial production declined and businesses' inventories mounted in 1993, government efforts to stimulate the economy through public works construction projects and lower interest rates proved ineffective. In three economic packages alone, the government ostensibly pumped about $132 billion (about 3.5 percent of nominal GNP in 1992) into public works projects, but the shrinking size of the construction industry in the economy and the dearth of consumer spending weakened most of the stimulative effect of the spending.(21) Japanese banks, saddled with potentially huge losses on real estate loans have been especially reluctant to engage in additional construction loan activities (the major thrust of all four stimulus packages). Also, the Finance Ministry has effectively negated any fiscal stimulus by trimming down the eventual size of the stimulus package from that announced initially and by offsetting increased spending on construction projects with reductions in the revenue it shares with local and prefectural governments.(22)
21. Shinmura, Toshio. Can Bulldozer Fix Economy's Rough Roads? The Nikkei Weekly, January 17, 1994. p. 3.
22. VanDenBerg, Jan. Japanese Stimulus: Truth and Advertising. International Economic Insights, July-August, 1993. p. 4; Revenue sharing from the central government accounts for about 40 percent of the revenues of local governments. See: Oishi, Nobuyuki. Local Budgeting Awaits Word From Tokyo. The Nikkei Weekly, January 31, 1994. p. 3.
Furthermore, the interest-sensitive sectors of the Japanese economy --business investment, mortgages, and consumer spending--are beset by a score of problems of their own. Businesses are unlikely to pick up spending on new plant and equipment as long as the rate at which they are utilizing their current plant capacity is low, their inventories remain high, and demand for their products is weak. Demand for mortgage funds increased during 1993, but land and housing prices are still too high for most Japanese to afford, despite the drop in real estate prices since their peak in 1990.
During 1993, the Japanese government offered two additional stimulus packages to perk up the economy, and the Bank of Japan lowered the discount rate two additional times to its current rate (as of March 2, 1994) of 1.75 percent. In addition, in February 1994, the Hosokawa government adopted an additional package of stimulus measures--the fifth since 1991. This package includes a combination of one-time tax cuts, including a cut in personal income tax rates, more public works spending, a small amount of funds for aid to farmers, and an employment subsidy program.(23)
23. Shinmura, Toshio. Short-Term Boost Expected From Stimulus. The Nikkei Weekly, February 14, 1994. p. 1.
A much larger income tax cut had been touted by business groups as an antidote for the economic slump. Until mid-December 1993, however, the Ministry of Finance had opposed any cut in income taxes unless such cuts were linked directly to an increase in consumption taxes to reduce the negative budgetary impact of any change in income tax receipts. The Hosokawa government overcame bureaucratic resistance from the Ministry of Finance and opposition from other political parties by agreeing to adopt a rise in sales taxes from 3 percent to 7 percent one year after the cut in income taxes to pay for the tax cuts. While the package is not expected to have a major impact on the economy, some analysts believe the cut in income taxes will stop the economy from deteriorating further until other forces, presumably business investment or consumer spending, can kick in to move the economy out of recession.
OUTLOOK
Most forecasts currently estimate that the Japanese economy will pick up in 1994. Business sentiment has turned decidedly negative, however, and was more pessimistic in early 1994 than at any time in the past 18 years.(24) As neither business investment spending nor consumer spending have shown clear signs of reviving, private research institutions in Japan have revised downward their projections of Japan's real GDP growth in 1994 to the 0.3-1.6 percent range from forecasts above 2.0 percent earlier in the year.(25) The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), which had issued its forecast in September of Japan's real GDP growth in 1994 of 1.4 percent, has revised its forecast down to 1.0 percent real growth.(26)
24. Business Gloomy Despite GDP Uptick. The Nikkei Weekly, December 13, 1993. p. 1.
25. Growth Projections Revised to 0.3-1.5% Range for Fiscal '94. The Nikkei Weekly, November 29, 1993. p. 3.
26. Clifford, Bill. OECD Sees Fiscal Stimulus, Structural Changes as Necessary. The Nikkei Weekly, December 6, 1993. p. 3.
A slow, drawn-out recovery for the Japanese economy augurs poorly for any quick reduction in the bilateral merchandise trade deficit with the United States and could impinge on the U.S. economy's own recovery. As long as Japan's economy lumbers along relative to more vigorous growth in the U.S. economy, U.S. exports to Japan likely will continue to stagnate, while strong U.S. demand will pull in more imports from Japan. The Clinton Administration is pressing Japan to do more to spur its economy beyond the tepid fiscal policies it already has adopted; however the continued appreciation of the yen may do more to trim the bilateral deficit than any bilateral negotiations. Although the reaction has been delayed and slow, Japan's continuing current account (exports and imports of goods and services) surpluses are causing the yen to appreciate against the dollar. While yen appreciation inflates the dollar-equivalent value of Japan's trade surplus, the volume of Japan's exports are being negatively affected by the higher yen and likely will continue to fall, curbing the current account surplus.
The present recession is affecting some institutions in Japan that have characterized the post-war economy. Confidence by businesses and others in the government's ability to handle the economy has been shaken. This loss of faith is especially noticeable regarding the Bank of Japan over its handling of monetary policy and the Ministry of Finance, whose reputation has been badly bruised over its handling of the financial industry, its implication in various financial scandals, and its dogged resistance to any fiscal stimulus measures that may entail increased deficit financing.(27)
27. Ito, Takatoshi. Losing Face? The International Economy, May/June 1992. p. 46-49.
Furthermore, the Ministry of Finance and the Economic Planning Agency (EPA) are being criticized for their unrealistic economic forecasts, which have seemed geared more toward presenting a favorable budget forecast (i.e., one that does not rely on the issuance of deficit-financing bonds) than on offering a credible assessment of the economy.(28) The EPA's official forecast for FY94 (Japan's fiscal year runs from April 1st to March 31st), for instance, projects that Japan's real gross domestic product will grow by 2.4 percent. Most Japanese economists consider this forecast to be more of an unofficial "target" than an actual forecast.(29)
28. How Bureaucrats 'Fix' The Numbers. The Nikkei Weekly, January 31, 1994. p. 5; and Iida, Mihoko. Fiscal '94 Real GDP Growth? Government Projects 2.4 %. The Nikkei Weekly, February 14, 1994. p. 2.
29. Iida, Fiscal '94 Real GDP Growth? Government Projects 2.4%, p. 2.
The relationship between firms and their employees, characterized especially by the lifetime employment system, is being challenged as firms seek ways to trim their work forces.(30) Most firms have released their part-time and contract workers and have taken other measures that major Japanese firms typically follow during economic slowdowns, including: reducing hours and bonuses; extending vacations; reassigning individuals to other jobs; and encouraging early retirement. The government has even subsidized firms not to lay off employees. Despite these measures, the continued economic slump is forcing firms to target parts of their core, white-collar, predominantly male workers for layoffs. These moves likely will push Japan's unemployment rate above the current 2.9 percent and dampen consumer spending, but they could make the labor market less structured over the long term.
30. Schlesinger, Jacob M. Japan Begins to Confront Job Insecurity. The Wall Street Journal, September 16,1993. p. A10.
Other Japanese economists believe that as the Japanese economy recovers from recession, it will find world economic conditions less amenable to the type of fast-paced growth Japan experienced in the 1980s. For one, these economists argue that a recovery based on a rapid, short-term expansion in exports is not feasible, considering the attention accorded Japan's merchandise trade surpluses by its trading partners and the high value of the yen. Also, other fast-growing Asian countries, especially China, will take some of the potential export growth from Japan. In addition, Japan is experiencing the 1088 of parts of its manufacturing base, which are relocating to China and elsewhere to escape the price effects of the high yen.
Another factor that could impede Japan's potential economic growth is the limits of technological innovation, since, by most accounts, Japan is no longer in a position of technological catch-up. Changing attitudes on the part of Japanese consumers, who have become more prone to seek out discount prices, the lack of a driving industry spurring domestic economic growth (principally business investment spending), and a decline in the Japanese labor force after 1996 all augur for a slower, rather than a faster, rate of economic growth over the long term.(31)
31. Low Growth Era Seen After Recession. The Nikkei Weekly, January 17, 1994. p. 3.
gwjapan.com ******************* Interesting that raising interest rates was beleived to have caused the collapse. Jack |