Who wrecked Japan's economy? Supply-side policies from the West have devastated Japan's demand-starved economy.AS THE JAPANESE ECONOMY implodes, the question becomes not just how Tokyo's "best and brightest" managed to get it so wrong, but why they failed to realize that supply-side policies in a demand-starved economy would take Japan so far in the wrong direction. Their latest insult to intelligence--Financial Services Minister Heizo Takenaka's proposal that banks already weakened by his mistaken policies should comply with artificial accounting standards--has triggered a stock-market collapse that could well be the last straw last straw n. The last of a series of annoyances or disappointments that leads one to a final loss of patience, temper, trust, or hope. [ . It never needed to happen. By 1996, sensible demand-side policies had already helped Japan recover from the "bubble" damage of the early nineties. But then the best and brightest brigade moved in. In the space of a few years they have managed to throw a basically strong economy into the dangerous deflationary spiral Noun 1. deflationary spiral - an episode of deflation in which prices and wages decrease at an increasing rate and currency gains in value spiral - a continuously accelerating change in the economy we see today. Their "success" matches that of another best and brightest brigade--the brains behind the US debacle in Vietnam. In seeking out the guilty, one naturally turns to Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi Junichiro Koizumi (小泉 純一郎 Koizumi Jun'ichirō . But the rot really began in 1997 with the fiscal restraint policies introduced by his predecessor, Ryutaro Hashimoto Ryutaro Hashimoto (橋本龍太郎 Hashimoto Ryūtarō, July 29, 1937 - July 1, 2006) was a Japanese politician who served as the 82nd and 83rd Prime Minister of Japan from January 11, 1996 to July 30, 1998. . Those policies quickly threw the economy into a swoon. It was just barely rescued by the expansionist ex·pan·sion·ism n. A nation's practice or policy of territorial or economic expansion. ex·pan sion·ist adj. & n. policies of the Keizo Obuchi Keizo Obuchi (小渕恵三; Obuchi Keizō, June 25, 1937–May 14, 2000) was a Japanese politician who served in the House of Representatives for twelve terms, and ultimately as the 84th Prime Minister of Japan from July 30, 1998 to April 5, and Yoshiro Mori Yoshiro Mori (森 喜朗 Mori Yoshirō, born July 14, 1937) is a Japanese politician who served as the 85th and 86th Prime Minister of Japan starting at April 5, 2000 ending April 26, 2001. administrations, the two conservative LDP LDP - Linux Documentation Project prime ministers who took over when Hashimoto was forced to resign in disgrace. To its credit, the LDP mainstream has always had a gut understanding of one simple truth: When an economy flags, government stimulation is needed. Hashimoto himself cannot be blamed too much, as he never pretended to be an economist. Much guiltier was LDP Secretary General Koichi Kato Kōichi Katō is the name of two House of Representatives of Japan's members.
Back in Japan, Kato fell victim to Finance Ministry bureaucrats, right-wing editors at the Nikkei Shimbun and Keidanren rednecks. Kato did most of the legwork leg·work n. Informal Work, such as collecting information or doing research in preparation for a project, that involves much walking or traveling about. to promote the foolish (and later withdrawn) legislation forcing the government to reduce deficit borrowing to zero within a fixed time limit. He also supervised the Darwinian policies that allowed the brutal bankruptcies of Yamaichi Securities Yamaichi Securities Co., Ltd. (山一證券株式会社 and Takushoku Bank. The Obuchi and Mori administrations were left to pick up the pieces of a shattered economy. But with Obuchi/Mori stimulatory policies pushing the official deficit toward [yen] 700 trillion, a clamor arose for yet another round of fiscal restraint. Since fiscal expansion had done little to help the economy, the argument went, the exact opposite was the answer. This is similar to arguing that since the life support needed by a heart attack victim has not cured the heart problem, there is no more need for the life support. From the beginning, Japan should have had the tax policies in place that could have moved some of its huge personal savings into the hands of the government, so it would not have to rely on borrowing. Tokyo has never had the courage to do this. With promises to cut deficits came the full range of the allegedly miraculous Reaganite/Thatcherite supply-side reforms--privatization, liberalization lib·er·al·ize v. lib·er·al·ized, lib·er·al·iz·ing, lib·er·al·iz·es v.tr. To make liberal or more liberal: "Our standards of private conduct have been greatly liberalized . . . , deregulation--that would fuel private entrepreneurs, who would in turn rush out and make the investments needed to fill the demand gap. In fact, those entrepreneurs went the other way. Rather than expand investments, they have been busy repaying bank loans. The demand gap has widened, not shrunk. The Bank of Japan has to take some of the blame. Both Masaru Hayami and establishment conservative Toshihiko Fukui got caught up in the bubble insanity of the late 80s: Hayami at Nissho Iwai by encouraging the foolish real estate investments that helped bring that once-proud trading house to its knees; Fukui as deputy Bank of Japan head when it was encouraging the banks to expand real estate financing. Their major sin was a crude, laissez-faire market fundamentalism that in the past denied the role of government or any other interventions. Here they are joined by the ultra-fundamentalist of them all--the mild-mannered but rigidly dogmatic 70 year-old Yutaka Kosai, chairman of Nikke's Center for Economic Research. While with the Economic Planning Agency in the early 90s, Kosai was on record as saying that since the market was willing to decree absurd prices for land, then those prices had to be seen as reasonable. Now he argues that today's collapsed land prices are also reasonable since they too have been decreed by the market. He has consistently tried to oppose the establishment of inflation targets, not to mention the need for fiscal stimulus. God only knows what advice he will be giving Koizumi in his present position. His predecessor in the Cabinet Office, Koichi Hamada, did at least have some inkling of Keynesian realities. The latest piece of Koizumi/Takenaka nonsense is forcing banks to dispose of To determine the fate of; to exercise the power of control over; to fix the condition, application, employment, etc. of; to direct or assign for a use. See also: Dispose bad loans, almost all of which are the result of dysfunctional policies enacted since 1997. (Indeed, informed bankers will tell you that by 1996, they had gotten rid of most of their post-bubble bad loans.) This is the equivalent of thinking that our heart victim would recover if a leg swollen by the heart problem were simply amputated. Of the guilty men, Takenaka, appointed by Koizumi to take total control of economic and financial policy, stands out. A product of Japan's de-intellectualized (i.e. brain-dead) postwar university education system, Takenaka is an example of a specific type of Japanese bureaucrat: those who spoke English and found it easy to establish an international profile while naively embracing Western supply-side dogma. Early in the Koizumi deflation years Takenaka told Japanese TV audiences how deregulation Deregulation The reduction or elimination of government power in a particular industry, usually enacted to create more competition within the industry. Notes: Traditional areas that have been deregulated are the telephone and airline industries. would bring about new employment--the baby-sitting industry being a good example. On a recent Asahi TV debate on the economy, Takenaka had the gall, of the ignorance, to claim that Japan was really doing quite well, since its stock-market fall the past year was much less dramatic than declines in the US and Europe. Sankei Shimbun's Channel 8 and Nikkei's Channel 12 programs have been even more culpable Blameworthy; involving the commission of a fault or the breach of a duty imposed by law. Culpability generally implies that an act performed is wrong but does not involve any evil intent by the wrongdoer. . The Yomiuri Shimbun clan, though very right wing, has consistently backed setting inflation targets and has criticized spending cuts. The Nikkei has recently begun to question whether cutting demand really is the way to revive a demand-starved economy. At long last some voices of reason. But why so late? Equally poisonous has been the role of foreign media, with London's Economist at the forefront, just as it was when it backed the best and brightest over Vietnam. Even the normally unbiased International Herald Tribune International Herald Tribune Daily newspaper published in Paris. It has long been the staple source of English-language news for American expatriates, tourists, and businesspeople in Europe. has since run numerous stories on how brave Koizumi's reforms would turn this economy around. I feel sorry for the many Western investors who took that advice. All in all, this combination of clueless clue·less adj. Lacking understanding or knowledge. clueless Adjective Slang helpless or stupid Adj. 1. statesmen and misleading media paints a very sorry picture indeed. |
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sion·ist adj. & n.
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