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Toward Japan’s economic end-game

By Dan Steinbock | chinadaily.com.cn | Updated: 2019-05-05 10:10
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As the spotlight has been on Japan's new Emperor Naruhito, the country’s economy is coping with half a decade of Abenomics: monetary injections, huge debt, and a proposed sales tax that could make things a lot worse by the fall.

Ever since Shinzo Abe started his second stint as Prime Minister, Japan has focused on positive economic signals, which has sparked futile hopes, including a bad sales tax proposition.

Japanese officials vow to stick to the planned tax hike in October (it has been delayed twice), barring a big economic shock. With the 2019 budget, Abe hopes to offset the adverse impact of the sales tax by returning much of the extra revenue to consumers via $18 billion of offsetting measures, instead of faster debt-reduction.

But recently, the cabinet downgraded its headline economic assessment for the first time in three years. Manufacturing, housing and retail indicators reflect signs of weakness, while first-quarter figures, expected in May, could show a contraction – especially as the impact of Trump’s tariff wars is spreading in Asia.

Half a decade of Abenomics

In December 2012, when the Liberal Democratic Party returned to leadership, Abe campaigned on renewed fiscal stimulus, aggressive monetary easing and structural reforms. The devaluation of the yen, critical to Japanese exporters, was the tacit denominator of the proposed changes.

In addition to a huge liquidity risk, Tokyo took another risk in timing, as I argued then. It sought to implement the fiscal stimulus in 2013, while consolidation would follow. Obviously, unease increased in 2014. As Abe went ahead with the sales tax hike that spring, it triggered a sharp slump. Instead of strong expansion, consumers were hit hard and Japan began its third lost decade.

Yet, recently, international observers have been remarkably optimistic. Last November, the IMF reported Japan has had an “extended period of strong economic growth.”

As the growth rate, supported by huge monetary injections and rapidly rising debt, increased to 1.9 percent in the fourth quarter of 2018, upgraded from preliminary data, and inflation seemed to be strengthening in early fall, the Abe administration began to flirt with another tax hike, again. “The sales tax hike to 10 percent is needed the most to secure stable financial resources to pay for social security for all generations,” said Finance Minister Taro Aso.

That is a pipedream. Huge monetary injections and increasing debt will undermine Japan’s economic future.

Excessive monetary injections

More than half a decade ago, the new governor of the Bank of Japan (BoJ), Haruhiko Kuroda, pledged to do "whatever it takes" to achieve the two percent inflation target. Under his reign, the BoJ boosted quantitative and qualitative easing with negative interest rate policy.

In 2018, BoJ’s bond and stock holdings topped 100 percent of GDP. Now the BoJ is adjusting the pace of bond purchases so that its holdings would not surpass 50 percent of the GDP, which is seen to herald the eclipse of monetary accommodation.

In 2018, foreigners held an all-time high of 12 percent share of outstanding debt, yet most debt is in Japanese hands and in yen. In turn, falling rates in the US and elsewhere have made Japanese bonds attractive, as long as their yields are not expected to fall much because of BoJ policy.

But times may be changing. At year-end 2018, the BoJ reduced slightly its holdings to 43 percent of all issued Japanese government bonds. It was the first quarterly fall in almost seven years. In the past five years, Japan's government debt has climbed to 255 percent to GDP. As long as interest rates remain ultra-low, servicing it is affordable. But nothing lasts forever.

Moreover, the original target of sustained two-percent inflation has proved elusive and some argue that the BoJ’s purchases of exchange-traded funds are distorting the stock market.

Toward the defining moment

Japan faces more urgently the same dilemma that today burdens most advanced economies: how to support high living standards with low or no growth?

In the past three decades, Japanese living standards have increased from over $30,000 to nearly $45,000. Yet, Japan’s trend growth has plunged from 5 percent to less than 0.5 percent – over 90 percent.

Figure The Japanese Dilemma

GDP per capita: Gross domestic product per capita, constant prices (PPP); 2011 international dollars. Growth rate: Gross domestic product, constant prices, percent change. Trend: dashed lines

Source: IMF/WEO Database, April 2019.

Nevertheless, the OECD, the advanced economies’ think-tank, is urging Japan to triple its tax to 26 percent to achieve a large primary surplus, by spending cuts, tax increases and curbing healthcare services. In reality, such austerity could derail remaining support structures for growth, inflation and average prosperity in Japan.

Japan is the first advanced economy in secular stagnation, but others remain in the same path. Penalizing the remaining middle-classes and working people, while sustaining the kind of privatization, liberalization and deregulation, which led to the income gap in the first place, is foolish.

To resolve structural challenges, a more realistic program is required to ensure fiscal sustainability, while raising productivity and reducing all unnecessary barriers to employment. But that’s only a start.

Japan needs a national drive to reduce its gender income gap (it ranks110th in the 2018 Gender Gap Index) and another to attract far more immigrants (with faster naturalization). In both cases, a change of magnitude is needed – policy nibbling will go nowhere. And instead of rearmament, militarization and conflict, Japan needs accelerated job creation, economic development and regional cooperation.

As the world’s third-largest economy and the second-largest debt market, Tokyo's future choices will have repercussions across the world – both good and bad.

Dr Steinbock is founder of the Difference Group and has served at India, China, and America Institute (USA), Shanghai Institutes for International Studies (China) and the EU Center (Singapore). 

The original version of this piece was published by the South China Morning Post on May 1, 2019.

The opinions expressed here are those of the writer and do not necessarily represent the views of China Daily and China Daily website.

 

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