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WSWS : News
& Analysis : World
Economy : Asian
meltdown
Deflation, production cuts and currency turmoil
A sign of things to come
By Nick Beams
2 June 1998
The last week in May was a bad one for world capitalism, and
could well signal the start of many worse days to come.
The week opened with a fall of 150 points on Wall Street amid
fears that the impact of the Asian meltdown was far from over.
Then came the crisis in Russia. On Wednesday the central bank
raised overnight interest rates to 150 percent to stem a run on
the rouble. The week concluded with the announcement in Japan
that unemployment had reached a post-war record of 4.1 percent.
Almost 1 million workers lost their jobs in April.
The Japanese jobless figures, coupled with other economic data
saw the value of the yen fall to 139 to the US dollar -- its lowest
level for seven years. A labour ministry spokesman described the
unemployment rate as "very severe", amid warnings that
it could soon reach 5 percent.
The record jobless figures point to the emergence of a deflationary
contraction. Japan is in the grip of a downward spiral of production
cuts, inventory adjustments and reductions in capital spending;
leading to further sackings, declining consumer confidence and
spending, resulting in further production cuts.
Retail sales for April were down 0.5 percent for the year and
2.1 percent over the previous month. Inventories -- unsold stocks
-- reached their highest levels for 25 years, despite a 1.1 percent
cut in industrial production over the previous month, and a 6.2
percent reduction over the previous year.
There were further danger signs for the banking system with
the decision by Moody's Investor Services to downgrade the credit
rating of the Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi and four other banks, amid
indications that it could lower the rating of four more.
Moody's said the continuing stagnation of the economy, the
bad loans in Asia and the problems arising from reckless lending
during the period of the "bubble economy" in the late
1980s may be too much for some banks.
"The combined scale of these problems may overwhelm many
banks' internal resources and necessitate substantial official
assistance," it said. In other words, Japanese banks may
start to collapse under the weight of bad debts and require government
action to prop them up.
Major banks are experiencing their worst earnings ever and
in the financial year to the end of March the top 19 banks wrote
off bad loans totalling 10.7 trillion yen, or $US80 billion. Some
analysts warn that only three of the top 20 banks may survive
the crisis.
Global financial institutions are predicting that the situation
in Japan can only get worse. According to Stephen Roach, chief
economist for Morgan Stanley: "In my conversations with literally
hundreds of institutional investors about Japan over the past
several weeks, one point comes through loud and clear: Investors
are virtually unanimous in their bearishness. In fact, in all
my years in this business, I have never come across such unanimity
on a market, a country or a concept."
Long-time Japan observer Dr Kenneth Courtis of the Deutsche
Bank warned: "This crisis in Japan is monumental, and that
creates monumental problems for the rest of Asia."
Asian recession deepens
The fall in the value of the yen is undercutting exports from
other Asian countries, adding to the regional recession.
The Korean economy, which will be the most adversely affected
by a sudden yen devaluation, experienced a 4.8 percent contraction
in the first quarter of this year. Industrial production in April
fell by 10.8 percent -- the biggest decline since records were
first compiled in 1954 -- following a 10.1 percent decline in
March.
Consumer demand was down by 10.5 percent and imports by 25
percent. The Korean stock market, which has almost halved since
March, hit an 11-year low. Despite the IMF bailout and a rollover
of foreign debts, the Korean financial system is still in a precarious
situation. Banks are holding $85 billion in problems loans, credit
is scarce and many small companies are going bankrupt.
Fearful of a financial crash, the government is backing efforts
to save the construction-based Dong Ah Group, the country's 10th
biggest chaebol, which is struggling under debts of $3.5 billion
-- equivalent to its entire annual revenue. The chairman of the
government financial supervisory commission overseeing financial
reform said the failure of the group would "cause the collapse
of the financial system."
Up until now Hong Kong and Malaysia seemed to have escaped
some of the more far-reaching effects of the financial crisis.
That impression was dispelled with the release of new economic
statistics.
Hong Kong recorded a 2 percent fall in Gross Domestic Product
for the first quarter of the year -- the first decline in 13 years.
Unemployment stands at 3.9 percent -- the highest for 14 years
-- and the economy is certain to record another quarter of negative
growth, moving into an official recession.
Hong Kong financial secretary Donald Tsang, who only days ago
was predicting a 3.5 percent growth rate for the year, said that
was now unattainable and that he had "never experienced a
situation as volatile as this over my 30 years as a public servant."
In Malaysia, the central bank announced on Saturday that GDP
had fallen by 1.8 percent in the first quarter, putting in doubt
predictions of a 2 percent growth rate for 1998. The manufacturing
sector fell by 2.4 percent and construction slumped 10 percent.
Across the border in Thailand, where it is predicted GDP will
fall by 7 percent for 1998, the manufacturing index for March
fell by 21 percent compared to a year ago, while the investment
index was down 9 percent.
The financial crisis continues to have its sharpest impact
in Indonesia. Moody's reported that Indonesia "is now faced
with a broadly insolvent banking system" with up to 75 percent
of loans classified as non-performing.
The International Monetary Fund's Asia office chief Hubert
Neiss has acknowledged that the contraction in the Indonesian
economy will be at least 10 percent, shattering earlier IMF predictions
of positive growth rates. Some forecasts put the contraction at
20 percent, with predictions that inflation could go as high as
700 percent over the next three months.
This means that the marginal increases in living standards
recorded over the past decade and a half, which were used to proclaim
an "Asian miracle", are being wiped out virtually overnight.
Russian breakdown
But perhaps the most ominous signs for the stability of world
capitalism were the events in Russia.
Barely a week after US Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin had
urged the House of Representatives to provide additional funds
to the IMF, warning that it would otherwise not be able to meet
another Asian crisis, Russian financial markets were in turmoil.
The immediate cause of the crisis was the failure of the $2.1
billion Rosneft oil privatisation to attract a bidder. Oil prices
have fallen from a high of $25 per barrel in January 1997 to about
$14 for the North Sea Brent blend, with Russian oil selling for
a discount of around $1.30 on the Brent price.
With the tripling of interest rates and a pledge of loan funds
from the IMF, the immediate crisis abated ... at least for the
time being. But stopgap measures are not enough, as the editorial
in the London-based Financial Times last Saturday made
clear:
"If the issue in Russia were simply one of confidence
then perhaps the interest rate hike, and yesterday's statement
of support from the International Monetary Fund, would be enough
to alleviate the crisis. But Russia also has serious cashflow
problems. The government has a rouble debt of $60bn, much of which
is short-term, and high interest rates mean the cost of borrowing
has soared. Foreign currency reserves are only $14.5bn, not enough
to protect the rouble against a large-scale outflow of foreign
capital: foreigners hold around $20bn of Russia's rouble debt
and the government has around $140bn of foreign-currency debt.
To cap this, Moody's yesterday downgraded Russia's credit rating,
making borrowing more difficult."
Structural problems
Confronted with the deepening global impact of the Asian crisis
various economic commentators and pundits are being forced to
recognise that it is rooted in structural problems.
Writing in the Sydney Morning Herald Max Walsh took
issue last week with a group of Australian National University
academics who claimed that the Asian crisis was primarily a "financial
adjustment". He insisted that Asia was suffering from "massive
structural problems."
"Japan is not suffering a cyclical downturn," he
wrote, "it is caught in a structure that cannot respond either
to fiscal or monetary stimulus."
In Washington, the head of the influential Institute for International
Economics, C. Fred Bergsten, warned that "more global crises
are coming", with Russia and Argentina as likely candidates,
along with countries in Asia.
Morgan Stanley economist Stephen Roach warned that despite
the US economy seeming to have reached a "sweet spot"
of low inflation and solid growth, "something big is about
to give."
However, even as they recognise that there is something very
much amiss in the function of the world economy, none of these
commentators pose, let alone address, the obvious question.
Why is it that in the midst of the greatest advances in technology
and labour productivity in history together with the development
of a truly integrated global financial system, world capitalism
is being wracked by growing turmoil?
Such questions are not probed because even to pose them leads
to other questions -- such as whether this mounting turbulence
is simply the result of wrong policies or mistakes, or is rooted
in the fundamental contradictions of the profit system itself.
See Also:
The Asian crisis and world
capitalism
A warning from Dr Greenspan
[26 May 1998]
Growing concern over the outlook
for capitalism
[13 May 1998]
Economic meltdown in Asia
[Articles and analysis by the WSWS on the economic and political
turmoil in Asia]
The Significance
and Implications of Globalisation
A lecture by Nick
Beams
[4 January 1998 -- full text of lecture: 115k)
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