Contributor Michael Green, sees the sun setting on Japan and offers three possible sources of light. ____________________________________________________________________
I recently read an article entitled “The Land of the Setting Sun” by John Mauldin which had some great statistical data on the future of Japan but which unfortunately painted a bleak picture of things to come.
The original article uses this data to talk about how bleak the future of Japan looks these days and how the government is running into serious debt problems.
I wanted to follow on the original article and take a look at some of the options available to potentially resolve this problem and hopefully return Japan to prosperity.
John has kindly allowed me to reference the statistics from his article. Let me first take a look at the data and some of the points made in the original article:
- Since 1999 the level of debt-to-GDP has risen from 99% to over 170%. Total government debt is close to 900 trillion yen and growing at about 7-8% a year.
- The Interest-rate expense on this debt takes up about 18% of the annual tax revenue that the Japanese takes in. Interest rates are going to have to rise as Japan will have to compete for capital with other nations. If interest rates double to around 2% or so the interest-rate expense would be approximately 40% of total tax revenues.
- In 2000 the personal savings rate was 18% now it is 1.8%. Much of those savings were used to buy government debt. With low interest rates the government was able to borrow a lot as the interest costs were not a factor. The lower domestic savings rate does mean that the Japanese government will have to seek financing from outside Japan at higher rates.
- If we look at the demographics we see a problem in that there are currently 1.2 nonproductive citizens (under 15 years old and over 64) for every productive Japanese citizen. This ratio is expected to reach 2.0 by 2020 and will only continue to grow thereafter.
This does not paint a pretty picture of the future. What does this debt problem hold for Japan’s future and what policy options are available to get them out of this mess?
Like an individual who is in debt, nations have the same basic options available, either cut expenses or raise level of income.
Solution #1: Raise Taxes
Just hike up the taxes and let the revenue flow in. Given that government borrowing is still increasing at 7-8% a year they would need to raise taxes to very high levels to first balance the budget then begin to pay down debt. This could lead to a prolonged period of very little economic growth that will make the so called “lost decades” of the past 20 years look like boom times in comparison.
Raising corporate taxes will reduce job creation which is essential to future economic growth. Raising personal income taxes will reduce disposable income and reduce demand levels which of course reduce economic activity.
Another G8 country with a similar problem successfully reduced their high levels of debt throughout the 1990s in part by raising taxes but that came at great cost. That country was Canada. Should Japan do this the end result will be lowered standards of living for Japanese citizens just as Canadians found out during the 1990s.
Solution #2: Cut Spending
If they cannot raise revenue then they have to cut expenses. But how much and where to cut? Do they cut health care? Sounds like a good idea until we realize that Japan has an ever aging society which needs health care funding.
How about cutting education? Not a wise thing to do as this will directly reduce national competitiveness. Again looking at the Canadian example, they made deep cuts to services during the 1990s, in particular health care. As painful as it was, they did reduce their national debt a great deal in 10 years. Again, as with increased taxes the end result is lower standards of living.
In the end, Japan is going to have to do a combination of both of these no matter what as at some point this debt is going have to be repaid or at the very least the debt is going to have to be rolled over assuming of course that creditors are willing to do so and this gets more costly the more the debt grows.
However, both of the above solutions do not address the long term issue which really struck me and is my motivation for writing this article.
The point about the ratio of non productive compared to productive citizens is my real concern here. The fact the society is getting less productive and is going to have to carry more unproductive citizens is most certainly going to negatively affect the level of GDP growth in the future and the standard of living for all Japanese even if the debt were not a bad as it is now.
Classifying people as “non productive” is why economics is called the “dismal science” but it is the hard reality. So what do we need to do then?
Solution #3: Societal Changes
The best long term solution is to restructure the population pyramid that makes up Japanese society which is the root cause of problem.
Non productive citizens pay less tax and as they age they tend to need more services and hence have a higher carrying cost to society. These are both driving the need to borrow more to maintain the same level of services. This trend is not getting any better and will have continued negative impacts on long term growth.
So what can be done to restructure society? One idea that is already being discussed is to try to encourage childbirth. This is a good start and a good long term solution but it will take time for these new children to grow up and start being productive members of society.
They will not start to make an impact until about 20 years from now when they first start to enter the workforce. In 20 years it will be 2029 and already too late to change things as the ratio of non productive citizens to productive ones is already expected to be over 2.0, nearly double what it is now.
A much faster solution is needed and it has to start within the next 2-3 years. Japan needs an influx of young productive workers which will consume goods driving economic growth while providing the revenue needed to support the current and future government spending. This is the key and it is the only solution that will work long term.
Tax and spending changes are relatively quick to implement compared to the long term problem with the structure of society which is much harder to deal with. What will happen is unknown but the fact is that something needs to happen and it needs to happen fast.
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Michael Green has been living in Japan for 9 years and resides in Tokyo. He has worked in the Financial industry for most of his career. He is a specialist in Business Process Re-engineering and Project Management.
More articles by Michael Green:
The Green Bubble Cometh - Part 1 & The Green Bubble Cometh - Part 2
I think another societal change that needs to happen in Japan is that people, especially the younger generations, need to be more involved in politics. Japan has been ruled by the same party since 1955 and many japanese have the mindset that "things can't be changed". Political action is one of the ways in which changes can be made in Japan.
Posted by: Tim Blakemore | Thursday, September 17, 2009 at 06:14 AM
TypePad HTML EmailTim,
Thanks for the comment. I agree completely. I hope that the new political party coming into power now will make a greater effort to engage the younger generation. Japan's future depends on it.
Posted by: Yvonne | Friday, September 18, 2009 at 11:19 AM
You have a nice strong point of view, ceep it up.
Posted by: Transporter | Sunday, October 25, 2009 at 04:39 AM
Transporter,
Thanks for the comment. Yes I will keep it up and you keep reading.
Yvonne
Japan-US Business News
Posted by: Yvonne | Sunday, October 25, 2009 at 11:23 AM
I wanted to follow on the original article and take a look at some of the options available to potentially resolve this problem and hopefully return Japan to prosperity.
Posted by: Victoria Real Estate | Friday, March 12, 2010 at 12:42 PM
I think another societal change that needs to happen in Japan is that people, especially the younger generations, need to be more involved in politics. Japan has been ruled by the same party since 1955 and many japanese have the mindset that "things can't be changed". Political action is one of the ways in which changes can be made in Japan.
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