by MrBill » Mon 24 Mar 2008, 10:56:54
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('threadbear', 'M')r.Bill, Why would Japan want to break out of it's Matrix? The article is writtenas if it's the job of the govt is to attract foreign investment, regardless of the further displacement and distortions that could cause.
Japan did the only thing it could do, during it's particular economic crisis, which was to erect trade barriers. Had they not, what on earth would have happened to that country in the 90's?
I do not agree that erecting trade barriers was the answer to Japan's problems. But protectionism usually exacerbates competitive issues not alleviates them. However, some problems that have arisen from those policy choices in the 90s:
1 - aging population combined with very high debt to GDP ratio means more money to service debt, less money for social spending
2 - addicted to ZIRP, so any increase hurts debt servicing costs
3 - ZIRP exporting excess money supply growth to the rest of the world through yen carry trade
4 - excess money supply growth drives up asset prices including commodity or input prices
5 - coddled industries less competitive
6 - higher input prices/lower labor productivity makes Japanese exports less competitive
7 - shrinking population and low growth means that in absolute terms Japan's share of global GDP is falling
8 - that is fine except FDI flows to where it can earn a higher return and into markets that are growing, not contracting
9 - yen is undervalued so imports more expensive (see points 4 & 6)
10 - inflationary pressures are becoming global, so not just tied to a weak US dollar anymore. That means that one CB acting alone cannot really act to contain global inflation, only the way that it transmits itself into the domestic economy.
The organized state is a wonderful invention whereby everyone can live at someone else's expense.