|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
: Japan
Japan slides back into recession
By Nick Beams
11 February 2000
Use
this version to print
A year ago the predictions were that the Japanese economy had
finally turned the corner and was about to come out of the deepest
and longest recession of the post-war period. And the confidence
of government officials that the economy was beginning to respond
to massive expenditure packages seemed to be confirmed by figures
for the first two quarters of 1999, which showed positive growth.
But doubts began to emerge when the figures for the September
quarter came in showing that the economy had contracted at an
annualised rate of 3.8 percent. However, the air of official confidence
was maintained, with the head of Japan's Economic Planning Agency,
Taichi Sakaiya insisting as recently as three weeks ago that the
economy would show an expansion in the December quarter.
Sakaiya has now reversed his predictions, warning on a television
show last Sunday that the December quarter Gross Domestic Product
figures, due to be released next month will show a considerably
large negative figure, putting Japan back into recession,
defined as two successive quarters of economic contraction. Some
analysts have already predicted that the GDP decline could be
as much as 5 percent on an annualised basis.
Sakaiya put the blame on slack consumer spending, resulting
from the decline in winter bonuses paid to workers and managers.
Whatever the immediate cause, the expected decline underscores
the underlying problemthe failure of successive government
stimulus packages to revive the Japanese economy.
The slide back into recession will fuel concerns that the government
stimulus packages are creating an unsupportable level of debt.
At the start of the last decade gross public debt was estimated
to be 69 percent of GDP. At the end of last year it was almost
130 percent, according to estimates by the IMF, with the prediction
that it will rapidly rise to around 150 per cent, with the annual
government budget deficit approaching 10 percent of GDP.
Even these figures do not tell the full story for they exclude
the Fiscal Investment and Loan Program (FILP) through which the
government channels money from the postal savings system and public
pension funds into public sector institutions. If the bad debts
of the FILP are added in, the debt is calculated to have already
reached 150 percent of GDP. To this must be added state-pension
commitments, estimated to be 100 percent of GDP, bringing the
total level of indebtedness to around 250 percent.
Commenting on the debt problem in an address to the Diet (Japanese
parliament) on January 28, Prime Minister Keizo Obuchi said: I
regard the fact that government debts will reach $6 trillion by
the end of the fiscal year as a very serious matter.
But he was not able to offer any prospect that they would be
wound back. The official government position is that spending
packages must be continued to counter recession. But they are
clearly not working and are adding billions of dollars to the
debt mountain.
Obuchi's remarks would have hardly inspired confidence. We
are not able to pursue the two goals of putting the economy onto
the track of fully-fledged recovery and working on the important
task of fiscal restructuring simultaneously, he said. I
believe he who runs after two hares will catch neither.
The problem for the government, however, is that while it has
been able, to this point, to draw on large supplies of loan funds
to finance its stimulus packages, this process cannot continue
indefinitely.
Concerns that the growth of indebtedness could spark a financial
crisis have been strengthened by the government's recent announcement
that it would borrow funds directly from the banks in order to
finance cash-starved local government bodies.
The problem has arisen because local authorities have been
suffering a fall in their tax revenues due to the economic recession.
The government had previously financed them through the FILP
with funds provided from the postal and savings system. But this
method of financing will be no longer possible in the coming period.
It is estimated that accounts worth some $900 billion in the
postal and savings system will mature in the next two years and
with interest rates on these savings at only 1 percent about $460
billion is expected to exit the system, seeking higher rates of
return in mutual funds or other investment avenues.
The amounts involved in the government loan program are not
small. After borrowing $1.35 billion last year, the government
is planning to ask the banks for $75 billion this year-more than
the GDP of Singaporeand equivalent to about half the amount
it has injected into the nation's top 15 banks over the past year.
There are potential problems in the method of financing as
well. While the government is planning to borrow money from the
banks short-termfor a one-year periodthe local authorities
require assistance over an extended period.
The operation has prompted warnings from financial analysts
that the Japanese financial system may be starting to crack. According
to Jesper Koll, the chief economist at Merrill Lynch Japan: The
whole pyramid structure of public finances is starting to give.
David Asher, a research fellow in the Japan Program at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology echoed this assessment.
The funding mechanism is breaking down, he told the
New York Times.
The dam is showing more and more stress fractures and
they're trying to put plaster on them.
With the failure of the spending packages to revive the economy,
voices are being raised with the ruling Liberal Democratic Party
and elsewhere that the program must be reversed and action taken
to reduce the debt.
These views were given expression in an address last Friday
to the Foreign Correspondents' Club by Akio Ogawa, a lecturer
in the Graduate School of Public Policy at Tokyo's Chuo University.
Warning that the Japanese debt was a time bomb, which could
wreck the world economy, he said: We are looking at a danger
signal blinking near and bright.
He denounced the public spending program for building bridges
to sparsely populated islands, concrete linings for rivers and
the construction of roads leading to nowhere. It benefited neither
the economy nor the Japanese people but only an iron triangle
of powerful politicians, bureaucrats and businesses.
Now we face a dire choice between huge tax increases
or hyperinflation to help reduce, if not wipe out, the debt that
has already got out of control, he said.
However, any measures to reduce the debt could have significant
global consequences. The last time the government tried to rein
it in, by lifting consumer taxes in April 1997, the economy moved
into a recessionone of the factors blamed for the eruption
of the so-called Asian financial crisis later that year.
See Also:
New pressures for economic
restructuring as Japan's jobless rate hits record high
[9 August 1999]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |