Last of the series Neo-liberalism could not only achieve its promises, but it also could not make a consistent policy system in the contemporary societies. Political intervention to the market economy by means of operation of fiscal and monetary policies can not be eliminated. For instance, the Japanese government and monetary authority positively operated economic policies to lower the rate of interest from the end of 1986, and to add a large quantity of public expenditure in spring 1987. These policies were a result of international politics to answer to the US government's strong request to expand Japanese domestic demand in order to mitigate the trade friction. As we noted, the resultant monetary and fiscal policies at that time obviously worked to initiate and promote the bubble economy. It was then an inevitable policy option to cause a setback of excessive speculative bubbles by tightening monetary policies in 1989-90. Against the neo-liberal creed, economic policies thus intervened in the working of market order in this period of Japan. However, they could not effectively control the destructive volatility of the market economy, but rather initiated and amplified its bubbly instability.
In the subsequent process of the 1990's depression, neo-liberal policies have been pushed forward. For example, labour laws and controls of employment relations are being deregulated so as to enable firms to use various types of workers more flexibly in a competitive labour market. Restrictions of large-scaled retail shops to protect small family businesses in local regions were deregulated. Liberalization of financial businesses to correspond with the global financial big bang has been promoted. However, being inconsistent with such neo-liberal policy stance with a belief in smaller government, the Japanese government has still strongly intervened in and affected the working of market economy. It actually expanded public expenditure, and injected an enormous amount of public money into rescue operation of banks and other financial institutions suffering from bad loans. The Bank of Japan cooperated with the government and reduced the official rate of interest from 6 per cent in 1990 step by step to an extremely low level of 0.5 per cent in 1995 to maintain this until now.
It must be clear that these intervenient policies have had a large scaled income redistribution effect as well as unfair distortion of the economic order against the assertion of neo-liberalism. Economic policies under neo-liberalism thus could not reduce the roles of the State one-sidedly. Especially Japanese economic policies lack consistency with the neo-liberal theories, and tend to give priority to mitigating the burden of economic crisis of big businesses in the fields of construction, banks and other financial institutions among others. In contrast, they tend to neglect the increasing economic difficulties and sacrifices among majority of workers and weaker people by emphasizing self-responsibility of individual persons in market principles. Such tendencies are observable also in the treatment of issues of fiscal crisis of the State.
4.3.2 Political Economy of the Fiscal Crisis of the State
Through the period of high economic growth until 1973, Japanese government used to maintain practically balanced budget. Although the influence of Keynesianism grew among bureaucrats and leading politicians, the government did not need to operate deficit finance. While a large scale of public expenditure to construct infrastructure for industrial growth and urbanization were continuously necessary, it was sufficiently financed by the 'natural increase of tax' along with the high economic growth. After 1973, however, when the continuous economic crisis began to persist, the outstanding government bonds began to increase rapidly. Initially public expenditure was expanded for economic recovery in accord with Keynesianism, but it was unsuccessful to restore both economic growth and tax revenue. As a result, the outstanding government bonds largely increased from 7.6 trillion yens (6.5 per cent against GDP) in 1973 to 70.5 trillion yens (28.7 per cent) in 1980, as we see in Table 4-1. In the 1980's, as the basic tone of economic policies turned to neo-liberalism, government expenditures for social security and education were severely curbed, and State-owned enterprises were privatized so as to cut down subsidies. Nevertheless, the attempt to restrain the government expenditure could not meet the tendentious stagnation and fall in tax revenue. Therefore the deficit of government continued at a high level (Table 1-2). Resultantly, the outstanding government bonds further increased to 166.3 trillion yens (37.9 per cent against GDP) in 1990 and more to about 254 trillion yens (49 per cent against GDP) in 1997. The last number is about five times of annual tax revenue of the State.
missing{(Table 4-1)} If we add to it other public debt of the central and the local governments, total public debt amounts to 476 trillion yens by the end of 1997. Its ratio against GDP is 92.6 per cent, and much higher than the similar ratio in other major capitalist countries in the same year. The comparable ratio is 64.1 per cent in the USA, 60.7 per cent in the UK, and 64.4 per cent in Germany. 476 trillion yens public debt means that the public debt of 3.78 million yens per capita or 15.12 million yens per household with four members are on the shoulders of Japanese people for the future. Its burden is still growing. Here is an additional difficulty like a black hole for the Japanese economy to recover its real growth. The increase in the quantity of interest payment for public debt is relatively restrained by the monetary policy to keep the interest rate extremely low. Still the interest payment just for the government bonds amounts to 11.7 trillion yens in 1996, and spends more than 60 per cent of income tax. This works as a powerful means of income redistribution from the great number of tax-paying workers to the owners of State bonds. In 1996, banks and other financial institutions own 27.5 per cent of the outstanding government bonds, and if we add to them the Bank of Japan, financial institutions own more than 41 per cent of government bonds. In comparison, little if any of State bonds are owned by the majority of workers' households. So far as banks borrow from the Bank of Japan by 0.5 per cent of interest payment just to invest in public debt, the large portion of interest payment for public debt works practically as subsidy to banks. In 1966, the part of the compensation of employees in the national income statistics is 283 trillion yens. It is not at all a small problem to see 4.1 per cent of this workers income is redistributed as interest on government bonds, or nearly 8 per cent for interest on total public debt. Interest payment just for the government bonds already amounts to nearly twice as much as the total government expenditure on education and culture, and approaching the size of that on social security.
The worry of a further increase in necessary expenditure for interest on public debt must be a reason to make the Japanese government and the monetary authority reluctant to revise the extremely lowered official rate of interest. Together with the depressed demand for loans among depressed private firms and consumers, the Japanese deposit rate of interest has been kept very low, almost near to zero following the official rate. This gives a great difficulty for pension funds to keep the promised pension payment, as well as for retired older persons who expected to gain some interest on their savings.
Notwithstanding such a lowered rate of interest, the burden of interest payment on cumulative government bonds became in itself a source of fiscal crisis of the State, by making the total amount of government expenditure so hard to reduce. In this regard, the Japanese State budget resembles the reckless business firms, which have to increase their debt in order to meet the need for interest payment in the form of Ponzi finance. It is indeed curious to see that the State budget in Japan is falling into such a deep crisis just like in many Third world countries. Because the Japanese economy has simultaneously realized a position as a great economic power by strong business firms with the largest foreign exchange reserve and the largest net foreign asset in the world. There must be something wrong and unsound in the Japanese economic order and the ways of policy operations.
Among others, the failure of the government to recognize the much lowered growth trend must be a source of deepening fiscal crisis. Japanese government has continuously tended to expect a higher economic growth and therefore a greater amount of State revenue annually, and was actually betrayed by the lowered real growth trend with a wide shortage of tax revenue. Especially in the 1990's, excepting 1995-96 the economic outlook by the Japanese government has been actually betrayed by the real achievement of the economy with the lowered trend, as we see in Table 4-2. The government used to assume that the growth rate around 3 per cent is easily achievable in the Japanese economy, and could not lower its outlook nearer to the actual new trend. After several years, it finally shifted down the growth rate in the outlook closer to the lowered trend in 1997. Even this lowered outlook was betrayed rather fairly widely by the negative rate of growth.
missing{(Table 4-2)}
There were reasons for the Japanese government to make the shift down of the economic outlook difficult. While the annual size of budget is directly constrained by the economic outlook, the reduction of expenditures in the budget has been not easy. The government had to expect a higher economic growth in order to draw up budget plans with certain levels of expenditures. On the other side, under neo-liberalism, the government publicly promised to reconstruct balanced budget without tax increase, kept various special tax exemptions for corporations, and actually reduced inheritance tax and land price tax rates for wealthier persons. Thus, while the State revenue tended to stagnate and severely restricted in the real process of depression, the budget expenditure for social security was hard to cut down in transition to an aged society, and the burden of interest payment on public debt continuously increased. Besides, there is an important aspect in the Japanese fiscal crisis originating from a series of State policies to mitigate the difficulties of big businesses.
For example, despite of the government promise to reconstruct balanced budget, national defense and official development aid (ODA) have continued to increase as sacred precincts in the expenditure budget since the 1980's. Even after the end of the Cold War, against the common trend to reduce the military expenditure among advanced countries, the Japanese budget for national defense continued to increase. The Japanese government has taken over more and more shares of costs to keep the US military base in Japan, and purchased more of sophisticated military aircraft and other weapons mainly from the USA. This must be regarded as necessary costs for Japanese politicians and business circle to keep the largest exporting market open in the USA by mitigating the trade friction. Corresponding to the international request, the Japanese ODA rapidly increased to 14.5 billion dollars in 1995, almost twice as much as that of the USA and of Germany. This serves in many cases practically also as a sort of subsidy for the Japanese business firms to expand their multinational activities in the surrounding Asian countries, besides serving as another device to reduce the trade friction with the USA and other countries.
At the same time, the amount of public expenditure has been rather increased and kept at a high level mostly in favour of civil engineering and construction industrial firms, although this is very inconsistent with the neo-liberal policy stance against Keynesianism. The size of public investment in terms of the government fixed capital formation (total investment to public utilities including attached facilities and equipment of the central and local governments minus the costs of purchasing necessary land) against GDP used to be 4 per cent level before 1970. The ratio increased widely to 6 Per cent level after 1972, and reached 6.6 per cent in 1978-79 when the economic crisis began and deepened under Keynesianism. With the turn to neo-liberalism in the 1980's, it declined to 4.9 per cent in 1985 by the request to curb expenditure budget aiming at balanced budget. However, it upsurged again with the policies to expand domestic demand in the late 1980's, and rose also additional emergency economic policies against the persistent deepening depression in the 1990's. Thus the ratio increased to 6.9 per cent in 1996, more than 30 trillion yens in real number. Its relative size against GDP is almost 4 times of the similar ratio in the USA, and more than 3 times of that in Germany.\footnote{Okonogi, K. (1998), p.139-40.} If we add with it the purchasing costs of necessary land and highway construction costs by the public corporation, the total amount of investment in public utilities reaches 50 trillion yens. This occupies 10 per cent of GDP, and is close to total tax revenue of 55 trillion yens in that year. It can not be an exaggeration to characterize Japan as a civil engineering and construction nation State with the enormously disproportionate spending for public utilities.
This enormous amount of expenditure for public utilities directly serves for politicians and bureaucrats to secure their vested interest. Politicians in the government parties can impress their service to their regional voters by its effect to construct utilities and to maintain employment for construction, and can expect political donation from the construction companies. Bureaucrats would expect to secure the descending appointment positions in the related private companies. At the same time, its effect to mitigate the deterioration of prices of land and real estate and to stimulate the land market is also expected. In this regard, the increased public investment contains political intention to help financial institutions with a heavy burden of bad loans relating to the lowered prices of land and real estate.
However, the increased public investment have not worked as an effective pump priming policy in the context of the linkage of depressive pressures in the Japanese economy in the 1990's. The pressure of asset deflation has bee so heavy. Besides, the consumption demand, which occupies about 60 per cent of total demand, has been cooled down by uneasy worries for the future economic life among people, and thus makes the economic recovery harder. Construction and repair of roads and highways would no longer much effect in expansion of domestic sale of cars. Employment effect of public investment became less and less as the civil engineering and construction industry introduced more of heavy machinery to economize direct labour costs. Thus the multiplier effect of public investment in civil engineering and construction has been substantially reduced.\footnote{On this issue, Jichitai-mondai Kenkyusho [Research Institute of Local Communities' Problems] (1998) presents an input-output analysis to show a much reduced multiplier effect of public investment.}
Since the monetary policy to set and maintain the extremely low rate of interest, and fiscal policy to add to public investment did not work sufficiently for economic recovery, the threat of asset deflation kept on and spread a possible fear for a chain reaction of failures in financial institutions. Therefore a new type of public spending started. The first case was injection of 685 billion yens of public money into the related financial institutions, when seven specialized housing loan companies failed in 1996. Then under the name to maintain the financial market order, the maximum amount of 60 trillion yens of public money was allowed to be injected into banks and other financial institutions so as to save their failures or to work as saucer banks for depositors of failed banks. This type of new policy works clearly to counter the destructive effect of asset deflation and to protect economic interest of the asset holders among big firms, wealthier persons as well as of financial institutions with bad loans. Sometimes the policy is legitimated as a means to protect general depositors. But as a means to protect smaller amounts of depositors, there must be more economical means such as to strengthen the savings insurance organizations. Anyway direct injection of big amount of public money directly in order to save banks and other financial institutions is totally inconsistent with neo-liberalism. It can not easily legitimated also by the Keynesian theories, and would not signify a return to Keynesian policy stance. From the view of economic theories, it can not be logically explained. It thus shows theoretical confusions in economic policies, though it still basically follows the spirit of company-centered socio-economic order.
Correspondingly, the burden of fiscal crisis of the State has been transmitted broadly to working people. The consumer tax, which is a typical mass taxation, was introduced at a rate of 3 per cent in 1989, and the rate was raised to 5 per cent in 1997. The government misunderstood the increased consumer demand in 1996 due to consumers' behavior to purchase in advance to avoid the announced rise of consumer tax, and believed it as a strong sign for a real economic recovery. The government thus assumed it timely and possible to come back to reconstructing the budget. Therefore it increased the private burden for medical services from 10 per cent to 20 per cent of actual costs, and abolished the special reduction of income tax, besides raising the consumer tax to 5 per cent from April 1997. The total amount of increased burden on the mass of people reached annually 9 trillion yens. The government's optimistic projection, that the effect of such increased burden would be short and light, was widely betrayed. As the consumer demand cooled down again, the Japanese business activity re-strengthened depression. The Asian monetary and financial crises also reciprocally intensified the Japanese economic difficulties. As a result four financial institutions including Yamaichi Security and Hokkaido Takushoku Bank failed in November of the same year 1997, and further deepened the economic difficulty and worry for the future among working people for the following two years by now with rapidly increasing unemployment.
Thus, while neo-liberalism became a basic policy stance to meet and restructure the fiscal crisis of the State, a series of fiscal and monetary policies were implemented in favor of big businesses, especially in the civil engineering and construction industry and the financial business area. The swell and burst of huge bubbles was initiated and promoted by such operations of economic policies. In the 1990's depression, the scale of monetary and fiscal policies was rather extended as we have seen. Those concrete policy operations served to mitigate the crises of financial institutions, big businesses and wealthier persons in the process of asset deflation. However, they are clearly inconsistent with neo-liberalism, theoretically confusing as in the case of injecting huge public money into financial institutions, exasperated the fiscal crisis of the State, and still have not work well for macro economic recovery. In the meanwhile, the burden of fiscal crisis of the State has been sifted more and more to households of living and working people in the form of increase in consumer tax and personal payment of medical services among others.
The whole operation of recent Japanese economic policies is in these regards thoroughly capitalistic despite of its theoretical confusion and inconsistency. It pays little attention to the economic difficulties with increasing worries for the future among living and working people. It does not present proper social policies to solve the problems concerning a rapid fall in birthrate, a transition to an aged society, and the worsening employment conditions with increasing unemployment. The depressed consumer demand by worrying working people tends to counter the economic recovery and consequently the reduction of bad loans. The failure of economic policies in 1997 as we noted typically exemplifies such a problem in the Japanese economy.
Can we not hope to convert such a basic direction of Japanese economic policies? It must be surely desirable from the view of economic democracy to change the excessively capitalistic policies, putting priority to big business with huge amount of public investment. The potentiality of the Japanese economy can and need to be redirected so as to form a strong economy for living and working people with stable social policies easier to grow children. Such a conversion of basic policy stance may not instantly enable to overcome the lowered trend of economic growth. However, the current vicious circle between the worsening employment situations with increasing unemployment and the deflationary pressure in the economy can be solved and stabilized by restoring an easy and more guaranteed feeling for the future among people so as to revitalize consumer demand from below. Anyway, neo-liberalism as well as the inconsistent emergency economic policies in favor of big business and financial institutions need not be believed as inevitable policy options for the Japanese economy. It is rather counter-progressive and destabilizing. It is unfortunately difficult to find effective political parties in the contemporary Japan to present such critical policy options for working people, excepting still relatively small Japanese Communist Party. As The Japanese Socialist Party changed its character, became a government party once in cooperation with the conservative Liberal Democratic Party, and altered its name into Japanese Social Democratic Party in the 1990's, following the dissolution of Sohyo with weakened left-winged labour movements. However, this unfortunate political situation would not discount but in a sense elevate the importance of critical analyses of the roots of degeneration and confusions in Japanese economic policies for the future of economic democracy and socialism. ricardo.ecn.wfu.edu **************************** Alot of authors beliefs intermixed with very good research. Jack |