October 17, 2010

WHILE THE DIFFERENCES MATTER, THERE ARE THREE RECENT SIMILARITIES:

Japan Goes From Dynamic to Disheartened (MARTIN FACKLER, 10/17/10, NY Times)

Few nations in recent history have seen such a striking reversal of economic fortune as Japan. The original Asian success story, Japan rode one of the great speculative stock and property bubbles of all time in the 1980s to become the first Asian country to challenge the long dominance of the West.

But the bubbles popped in the late 1980s and early 1990s, and Japan fell into a slow but relentless decline that neither enormous budget deficits nor a flood of easy money has reversed. For nearly a generation now, the nation has been trapped in low growth and a corrosive downward spiral of prices, known as deflation, in the process shriveling from an economic Godzilla to little more than an afterthought in the global economy.

Now, as the United States and other Western nations struggle to recover from a debt and property bubble of their own, a growing number of economists are pointing to Japan as a dark vision of the future. Even as the Federal Reserve chairman, Ben S. Bernanke, prepares a fresh round of unconventional measures to stimulate the economy, there are growing fears that the United States and many European economies could face a prolonged period of slow growth or even, in the worst case, deflation, something not seen on a sustained basis outside Japan since the Great Depression.

Many economists remain confident that the United States will avoid the stagnation of Japan, largely because of the greater responsiveness of the American political system and Americans’ greater tolerance for capitalism’s creative destruction. Japanese leaders at first denied the severity of their nation’s problems and then spent heavily on job-creating public works projects that only postponed painful but necessary structural changes, economists say.

“We’re not Japan,” said Robert E. Hall, a professor of economics at Stanford. “In America, the bet is still that we will somehow find ways to get people spending and investing again.”


Bill Emmott's Sun Also Sets did a particularly good job of predicting Japanese decline based almost entirely on cultural factors, nearly all of which distinguish it from the West. But there are three ways in which we have aped them over the last 6 years: Republicans killed W's immigration reform; Democrats have stifled free trade expansion; and the Fed has kept interest rates artificially high in the midst of structural deflation. Happily, these are all easily remedied.

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Posted by Orrin Judd at October 17, 2010 10:28 AM
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