(2) Japan and Abenomics | Once More With Feeling. The Shinzo Abe shaking up Japan’s economy seems a different man from the one whose previous premiership was marked by nationalistic posturing. He isn’t. Economist, May 18, 2013.
http://www.economist.com/news/br ... -one-whose-previous
Quote:
(a) "His [Shinzo ABE's] measures—doubling the monetary base through an unprecedented programme of quantitative easing—exceeded everyone’s expectations, and their daring was played up by Mr Abe’s advisers. They are convinced, and have convinced their boss, that getting Japan out of its deflationary funk is less about policy details than perception—in particular, about shaking people out of a deflationary mindset. The approach, one says, is a kind of 'shock and awe.'
(b) "Nominal GDP determines the level of tax revenues—and, astonishingly, persistent deflation has left it where it was 1991 (see chart 2). This has depressed tax revenues, a chief reason why the gross national debt has widened to about 240% of GDP. * * * In the budget for the year that ended in March, and across central and local governments, total government spending on pensions, health care, nursing care and family benefits was ¥124.5 trillion, or 26.1% of GDP. But government revenue amounted to only ¥59.2 trillion, or 12.5% of GDP. Borrowing largely made up the difference.
(c) "So Japan desperately needs a sustained increase in the long-run rate of economic growth. Hence the third of Mr Abe’s arrows: sweeping reforms designed to invigorate the supply side of the economy. Mr Abe talks of ending the protection enjoyed by Japan’s farmers, doctors and pharmaceutical companies; breaking open the labour market’s rigidities; improving education; cutting through boundless regulation; opening utilities up to competition; encouraging innovation and spurring business investment.
(d) "His staunchest supporters, including his chief cabinet secretary, Yoshihide Suga, told him that committing to the TPP beforehand would endanger the LDP’s chances in July’s elections for the Diet’s upper house. The farm lobby is, after all, an important plank of the party’s support. Yet the prime minister insisted on doing it when he went to Washington in February. Delay, he thought, would show a want of leadership. He seems to have been right. Mr Suga now calls TPP 'the biggest pillar of reform.' He is the chief defender of Mr Abe’s decision, and no wonder. Mr Abe’s poll ratings continue to climb; he enjoys support of over 70%, unparalleled for a recent leader. The LDP looks set for a landslide in the upper house to match the one it achieved in the lower house in December.
My comment:
(a) The title "Once more with feeling" came from
Once more with feeling!
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Once_More,_with_Feeling!
(a 1960 British comedy film; adapted from a Broadway play which opened in 1958)
(b) The section heading "Well begun is half not done" is a word play on "Well begun is half done"--by Aristotle.
(c) There is no need to read the article, if you do not want to. |