1 / 21

Japan’s Bubble

Japan’s Bubble. Economics 285 Fall 2000 Prof. Michael Smitka. Two key causes. Management geared for high growth Interacting with Macroeconomic policy mistakes. As a result. Interest rates were 0% Firms overborrowed Projects that earned a mere 0% passed muster Banks overlent

thuy
Download Presentation

Japan’s Bubble

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Japan’s Bubble Economics 285 Fall 2000 Prof. Michael Smitka

  2. Two key causes • Management geared for high growthInteracting with • Macroeconomic policy mistakes

  3. As a result... • Interest rates were 0% • Firms overborrowed • Projects that earned a mere 0% passed muster • Banks overlent • Collateral or track records were enough • Asset prices proved unrealistic • Projects didn’t earn 0% ex post • Banks couldn’t collect on their loans

  4. Japan’s Case- high-growth underpinnings of a bubble - • Management had no need for financial controls • project selection was easy • failure was hard / recessions were few & far between • But pricing long-lived assets was hard • Real estate grew faster than economy • Stock prices grew faster than economy • Growth industries grew very fast indeed!!

  5. Why the “bubble”?- the lending side - • Change undermines rules of thumb for banks • Change in types of industry / borrowers • Change in strategic environment / flow of funds • Change in regulatory environment • Mistakes are made … • … and a shock produces crisis

  6. Growth Dynamics • Transition out of agriculture • Fast productivity growth in industry • Urbanization! • Household formation • Infrastructure, housing • But it’s a one-time transition! • And eventually ends

  7. Slowdown • Industry no longer needs funds • 1970s: 10% of GDP swing in under a decade!! • But households keep saving • Past savings were when incomes were low • So accumulated wealth was modest • So people needed to keep saving to fund old age • Who then will borrow this funds? • Paradox of Thrift!!

  8. Shifts in Japanese Savings Flows

  9. The Primary Shock1970 vs 1976 • Corporate investment fell 10% of GDP • Savings rose! • Banks were left to scramble

  10. Interregnum • Japanese fiscal deficits • created a new borrower for banks • MOF policy stopped that by 1982 • Reagonomics: US consumption boom • Export-led growth from 1982 • Appreciation / Plaza Accord stopped that from 1986

  11. Secondary Shock • Bad macro policy • Easy money from 1986 • “Japan as Number One” psychology • Just as banks sought new borrowers • Real estate … and more real estate! • Small business • Also international loans

  12. Shocks, continued • “Bubble” economy • Stock prices doubled • Urban real estate prices rose even more • Fiscal policy mistakes accentuated • On-again, off-again policy built up debt • Regulatory policy errors accentuated • Banks allowed to make more bad loans

  13. Stock market- today’s market is no higher than in 1986!! -

  14. Today’s Dilemmas • Monetary policy doesn’t work • Interest rates can’t be pushed below 0% • But prices are falling ==> real rates are positive • Banks (rightly) fear bad assets • Outstanding loans are shrinking! • Money growth is of cash… • “Liquidity Trap” • If monetary policy doesn’t work, how about fiscal??

  15. ZIRP

  16. Interest Rates Current lending rates: Short-term prime rate: 1.5% Long-term prime rate: 2.25%

  17. Credit Creation & Money

  18. Fiscal Policy • Repeated fiscal packages • Short-term policies are discounted by consumers • Higher temporary incomes are counteracted by stagnant consumption • Credibility lost • Permanent tax cuts?? • Huge deficits already - 7% of GDP • Demographic “old age” boom looms • No room left to add fiscal stimulus?

  19. Predictions • Japan will underperform growth elsewhere • Safety valve: exports? • Real wages / labor costs remain high • Must have counterpart capital flows • Global capital markets are crippled • Can’t sustain large trade surpluses / capital deficits • Firms engaging in DFI - doesn’t help domestic GDP • J will permanently underperform OECD

More Related