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Japan’s Lost Decade: Could It Happen in the United States?

JAPAN’S LOST DECADE: COULD IT HAPPEN IN THE UNITED STATES?

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CHAPTER OUTLINE

The Economic Situation in Japan Prior to 1990

So What Happened in Japan to Change All This?

How Is This Similar to the Current Situation in the UnitedStates?

Summary

LEARNING OBJECTIVES

LO1: Understand that rates of economic growth, stock marketvalues, and land values in Japan were high and/or

growing rapidly between 1955 and 1990.

LO2: Describe the economic collapse that occurred between1988 and 1990 and compare its causes with those of the

U.S.financial markets in 2008.

LO3: Describe the policy attempts of the Japanese government to revive the economy during the 1990s and compare

and contrast those with the attempts of U.S. policy makers to mitigate the damage of the 2007-2009 recession.

LO4: Describe the low growth rates of the Japanese economyfrom 1990 to 2010 and assess the likelihood that the

United States will suffer from a similarly extended periodof slow economic growth.

DISCUSSION QUESTIONS

  1. How did Japan become the second largest economy in the world during the decades of the 1970s and 1980s?
  1. Briefly explain one problem that economists face when comparing the economic activity between countries.
  1. What was the condition of the real estate market in Japan immediately before and after the economic crisis in the 1990s?
  1. Why did stock prices in Japan fall drastically in the 1990s?
  1. What caused an increase in the saving rate in Japan in the 1990s?
  1. Mention some of the principal economic problems that policymakers in Japan failed to recognize.
  1. What was the impact of the discretionary fiscal policy adopted by the Japanese government to revive the Japanese

economy?

  1. How was the economic condition in Japan in the 1990s similar to economic condition in the United States in 2008

and 2009?

  1. Mention some policies adopted by the government of the United States to keep deflationary pressures at bay after

2008 and 2009.

  1. Why do some conservative economists think that the policies used to revive the US economy after 2008 might not

be entirely helpful in restoring economic prosperity?

THE WEB-BASED QUESTIONS

Part I.

Robert Jacob Samuelson, a leading columnist for the Washington Post, discusses why Japan’s economic crisis should be considered as a cautionary tale for the United States in one of his articles. Read the article by visiting the following website:

  • How is Bank of Japan’s decision to ease credit likely to affect the Japanese economy?
  • Give three reasons why Japan’s experience has relevance for America’s recovery.

Part II.

Go to the following article in the Japan Times:

  • What caused the asset price bubble in Japan during the 1990s?
  • Do you think that the main reason behind the recent housing bubble in the United States was similar to that in Japan?

ANSWERS TO STUDY QUESTIONS

SUGGESTED ANSWERS TO THE DISCUSSION QUESTIONS

  1. During the decades of the 1970s and 1980s the story ofJapan was one of phenomenal growth in their economy and prestige in the world. After the devastation and humiliation of World War II, Japan rebuilt itself on an ethic of hard work, a focus on education, an impression of loyalty between employees and employers, a veryhigh saving rate, and a dedication to producing quality manufactured goods for export to the United States and other countries. During this period, Japan became the second largest economy in the world by producing the types of innovative products that were both inexpensive and well-constructed.
  1. One of the problems economists face when comparing the economicactivity between countries is that while it is tempting toconvert everything into one currency so you can compare trillionsof dollars of GDP to trillions of dollars of GDP, there areproblems associated with any method you use in performing thecomparison. For instance, if you simply use the exchange rate between currencies, youcan leave the inaccurate impression that a sharp increase inthe rate of growth or a sharp decline in the rate of growth wasfelt by people in that country.If the exchange rate rises or fallsby 5 percent and economic activity in inflation-adjusted termsin that country was 3 percent, this can be reflected as eitherwildly expansionary growth or similarly draconian contraction.
  1. In 1991, according to The New York Times, the total value of every plot of real property in Japan was

$18 trillion. For a country of roughly the same size as California, that was at the time more than the combined

total of all real estate in the United States. Between 1991and 2005, the total value of all real estate had

declined to less than half that.

  1. Stock prices fundamentallyreflect the present value of future expectedprofit streams and stock market bubbles occur when the prices of stocks reflect a “me too” or “ better buy nowbefore the price goes up” attitude among investors ratherthan a straightforward analysis of future profits. In late1989, the Nikkei average or the Japanese stock exchange was standing at nearly 39,000. At those levels, stocks were significantly overvalued relative to the profits those firms were generating.Like allbubbles before this one and after this one, it burstand stock prices fell drastically.
  1. Real estate prices and stock prices fell drastically in Japan in 1990s.The two effects built upon one another. As stockprices were plummeting, those with stock purchased on margin calls had to shed themselves of real estate in order to meet those margin calls. Those who found themselves underwater in their homes had to sell off their stock holdings to pay off the loan amounts that the sale of the land did not cover. With this massive decline in wealth in Japan, personal and corporate bankruptcies hit record highs. People who thought they had saved sufficiently to retire were now in no position to retire and, paradoxically, raised their rates of savings dramatically. While that may have been a good idea for them as individuals, it was catastrophically bad for the overall economy.
  1. Theprincipal problem that policy makers failed to recognizewas, first, the degree to which the real estate bubble wasindeed a bubble; their late reaction, and, as it turns out,overreaction to it; their failure to see the interconnectionsbetween the real estate bubble that was collapsing andthe stock market bubble that was also collapsing; theirfailure to appreciate the problems of combatting a deflationary spiral; and (to many liberal U.S. economists)their constant underfunding of stimulatory actions whilespending those stimulus funds on the wrong types ofthings.
  1. The attempts to restore the Japanese economy were constant. However, the Japanese government committed many of the classic errors in carrying out the discretionary fiscal policy. Inflation-adjusted government consumption spending increased during the first year of the recession but not by nearly enough to have any substantive impact and then fell to 20 percent below its pre-recession levels during much of the period. Public investment in infrastructure increased quite rapidly, but, in the era of modern capital driven infrastructure spending, employed relatively few people. Worse, an expectation of zero inflation or negative inflation created an insurmountable problem of expectations management.
  1. The bursting of a clear bubble in the real estate sector set off a process that threatened the health of banks both inJapan in the 1990s and the United States in 2008 and 2009.
  1. Several policies were adopted by the US government and the Federal Reserve after the financial crisis of 2008-2009 such as the Troubled Asset Relief Program, the stimulus package, the extension of the tax cuts within the stimulus package as well as the extension of the Bush-era tax cuts. The Federal Reserve also introduced the quantitative easing program. The then chairperson of the Federal Reserve, was of the opinion that while it will take time for the issues that resulted from the housing bubble to work their way through the system and they will remain in the economy for a protracted period, the actions taken, with the AIG takeover by the Federal Reserve, the TARP program that saved several leading banks from being declared insolvent by their regulators, and the sustained push by the Federal Reserve to buy long-term federal treasuries and mortgage-backed securities will keep the deflationary pressures at bay.
  1. From the moment the financial crisis hit, around Labor Day 2008, the Federal Reserve has injected $2.5 trillion in liquidity into the system. Initially, their actions were to lend financial institutions significant sums to make sure they were sufficiently capitalized to withstand the pressures associated with defaulting loans. As that money has been paid back, they have purchased more than a half trillion dollars in long-term debt and this has increased the fiscal deficit significantly. It is exactly this that makes some conservative economiststhink that these programs might not be entirely helpful in restoring economic prosperity. They are not worried that this will give rise to deflationary pressure as witnessed in Japan but they are worried that this might lead to inflation. They think that asthe money that is lent in this regard is money in the system that would not otherwise be there and that more money will be chasing the same number of goods, inflation will be the result. It is not the deflationary expectations that are holding back aggregate demand in their minds; it is that businesses lack the confidence they require to invest in future production.

SUGGESTED ANSWER TO THE WEB-BASED QUESTION

Part I.

  • The Japanese economy has been suffering from periodic bouts of deflation since the 1990s. Deflation causes people to postpone purchases, expecting items to become cheaper. It also deters borrowing, because debts have to be repaid in more expensive currency and is thus harmful for the economy. If the Bank of Japan decides to ease credit, inflation will occur. Higher inflation would cause the yen to depreciate, reviving exports by making them cheaper. To generate higher inflation, the Bank of Japan would inject money into the economy. Some extra cash would go into consumer spending; some would go into the stock market. All these will help in reviving the economy.
  • Japan’s poor economic performance ever since the bursting of the asset bubble has relevance for America’s tepid recovery from the financial crisis. This is because Japan faces three major structural problems and each of these problems has an American counterpart.

First, the country’s basic economic model is broken. That model was export-led growth. It worked well until the mid-1980s when the yen’s rising value made exports much more expensive. Japan has yet to create an adequate substitute. The U.S. counterpart is consumption-led economic growth.

Japan’s second problem is an aging andfallingpopulation. Already, nearly one out of four Japanese is 65 or older; the birth rate of 1.4 (meaning 1.4 children for each Japanese woman) is well below the replacement rate of about 2. This weakens the domestic market and raises government spending on the elderly. The United States has a similar problem, though milder.

Finally, both Japan and the United States have huge government debts — reflecting slow growth, aging populations and “stimulus” programs

Part II.

  • The Bank of Japan had lowered interest rates from 5 percent in 1985 to 2.5 percent by early 1987.

Japanese banks, which had previously lent mostly to corporations, now had ample funds to lend at a time when their major corporate customers were flush with cash thanks to their trade surpluses and the availability of worldwide equity markets, which competed directly with Japanese banks.

So the banks began freely lending to Japanese firms and individuals, who purchased real estate, which increased the paper value of land assets. This created a vicious cycle in which land was used as collateral to obtain further loans, which were then used to speculate on the stock market or to purchase more land. This drove up the paper value of land further, while the banks continued to grant loans based on the overvalued land as collateral.

There was little questioning by either the government or the banks themselves over how the loans would be repaid or what would happen once land values started dropping.

  • Answers may vary but students should mention the fact that extremely low interest rates are one of the main causes of the housing price bubble in Japan as well as in the United States.