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Japan’s recession evidently deepened even further in November as industrial output fell at the fastest pace in 55 years. Production plunged 8.1 percent month on month from October (Trade Ministry data), and was down an enormous 16.2% year on year. For an economy which lives from the prowess of its industrial exports, this is simply an earthquake.

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The decline in production was the largest since data for the present time series was first published in February 1953. As a result the ministry downgraded its output assessment to “declining rapidly.”

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This report comes hot on the heels of an earlier one, which showed that Japan’s exports plunged 26.7 percent in November, the sharpest drop since at least 1980. Japanese retail sales also fell in November - by an annual 0.9%. According to data from the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry, on a monthly, seasonally adjusted basis, sales were down 0.1% in November. Sales at large retailers decreased 3.2% on the year. These results were rather better than expected, but I wouldn't hold out much hope simply on that count, since the job market is still holding up reasonably well at this point, and consumers will be getting some benefit from slowing price increases (or even from price decreases). It is important to remember that this data is not price corrected, which makes it all just a little bit misleading.

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An Economy Trying But Failing To Generate Inflation?

Japanese consumer inflation declined in November, with the annual inflation rate falling to 1.0% (from 1.7% in October) on the general index. The index excluding fresh food also fell, from 1.9% to 1.0%. While the "core" core index - excluding fresh food and energy - came in at a stationary zero percent, down from October's 0.2% increase. In all three cases month on month inflation was negative.

Estimated headline inflation in Tokyo in December (which is often thought to give an indication of future national trends) was down to 0.7% year-on-year (compared to 1.1% in November). Thus, all the signs are there that Japan will soon be heading back into outright deflation, and the situation is only likely to get worse as the recession proceeds. Which brings us back to the inevitable question, was the Bank of Japan (BoJ) right to bring quantitative easing to an end in 2006?

In fairness to the BoJ, it may well have been succumbing to pressure from other central bankers at the G7 level rather than making its own mistake here, since Japan's zero interest rates were perceived as a serious impediment to introducing generalized monetary tightening against what was perceived to be a global asset bubble. The asset bubble undoubtedly existed, but it is not clear that Japan was at the root of the problem.

Paul Krugman once described Japan's economy as struggling to create inflation but being systematically incapable of doing so due to the presence of a liquidity trap - rather like a drowning man gasping for air who has the energy simply to bob up and down in the water, but not to swim to safety. As we can see in the chart below, "core" core inflation only barely broke the surface in what has been the longest boom in the Japanese economy since the start of the 16 "difficult years" in 1992. Food and energy prices certainly took off, but as these now come plunging down again, the negative shock will certainly send the "core" core diving after it and into negative territory - a Captain Ahab and the Moby Dick inflation dynamic, perhaps, with the BoJ playing the part of Ahab to Krugman's Ishmael.

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In fact Krugman was advocating the bank commit to substantial inflation (he suggests 4%) over a long period of time (15 years) as a way of stirring up strong inflation expectations and this was really just too much for the Bank.

Many people apparently read my previous note as saying simply that Japan should print money like crazy. I have indeed said this in the past (see What is wrong with Japan?), and see no harm in such a policy. But I now believe, based on the analysis in Japan's trap, that even a very large current monetary expansion will probably be ineffective. What is needed is a credible commitment to future monetary expansion, so as to generate expectations of inflation.How might the Bank of Japan achieve such a commitment? The natural way is to announce a target rate of inflation over the long term, with the announced intention of doing whatever is necessary to achieve that rate - basically the same as the inflation targeting now followed in, say, New Zealand or the UK, but with the objective being an inflation rate that is acceptably high rather than acceptably low The obvious question is how high a rate is needed, for how long. And the short answer is that I don't know, but I am working on it. A guess is that the required inflation rate isn't very high, but that people must expect it to last for a quite long time - we might for example be talking about, say, 4 percent inflation for 15 years.


Paul Krugman - Musings and experiments surrounding Japan's Recession

Japan's economy, yearning for inflation. Maybe Leonard Cohen had it right:

Like a bird on the wire,

Like a drunk in a midnight choir

I have tried in my way to be free.

- Leonard Cohen

Unemployment On The Rise As Job Market Tightens

Other data out this week show evidence of the labor market tightening, and rising unemployment. There were 76 job vacancies open for every 100 applicants ratio in November, which is down from 80 in October. The number of new job offers in November also fell 23.7 percent from a year earlier, and the jobless rate rose to 3.9 percent from 3.7 percent in October. However, despite the fact that the evidence is growing that temporary and part-time workers - whose numbers have grown substantially in Japan in recent years - are increasingly being laid off, at this point, we are still a long way from a significant rise in unemployment. According to data this week from the Labor Ministry, Japanese companies plan to fire around 85,000 of these workers by the end of the financial year, which is more than double the 30,067 forecast last month. Undoubtedly, that little line, which has started to move upwards in the chart below, will continue to do so in the months to come.

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And Japanese real wages fell again in November - by 3.1% - making for the seventh consecutive month of decline.


To wind up this short, end of year data report, overall household spending was also down in November by 0.5% from a year earlier (in price-adjusted real terms) - the ninth consecutive month where spending has fallen. Spending by wage earners' households was up 1.2 percent in November from the same month a year ago, even though wage earners' total cash earnings fell 1.9 percent in November from a year earlier - the first drop in nearly a year.

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Comments
11
     
  • let me give you a little hint. never write articles here on seeking alpha that take so long to read.
    2008 Dec 29 06:32 AM Reply
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  • Isn't it amazing that most everyone else in the world worried about inflation for the last 10 yrs and nothing much has changed in Japan.
    2008 Dec 29 08:04 AM Reply
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  • Just an additional data point:

    "The change that has hit the world economy is of a critical scale that comes once in a hundred years," Toyota President Katsuaki Watanabe said at a news conference in Japan. The drop in vehicle sales over the last month, he said, was "far faster, wider and deeper than expected."
    2008 Dec 29 09:22 AM Reply
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  • The Japs listen to KRUGMAN? No wonder their economy is in such trouble.

    cyclingscholar
    2008 Dec 29 09:39 AM Reply
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  • A big problem is the spending habits, or lack thereof, of the Japanese consumer. These people are taught from an early age to save and not spend and that is what they do. Ditto the Chinese. These countries have to understand that being a part of an integrated world economy means consuming as well as producing. How many countries is the US consumer required to enrich? The Japanese worry about having enough money in their old age. Perhaps the Japanese government should set up a social security system.
    2008 Dec 29 11:56 AM Reply
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  • The trillion dollar question: how is it going to play in the service oriented economy?
    2008 Dec 29 08:35 PM Reply
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  • edward, this was good work. i am really wondering what will really change in japan if inflation is introduced. their currency would be worthless in the carry trade. the average japanese would be faced with higher costs (i realize wages would go up but it is usually a year out of sync). in a world recession - where is their export market?

    what they need to do is get their currency under control. they need to print Yen and buy US dollars. this improves their export position to the USA and to europe.

    2008 Dec 30 03:39 AM Reply
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  • A report conducted by the World Economic Forum (WEF) has placed Canada at the top of the pile, just above the likes of Sweden, Luxembourg and Australia.

    The statistics have been compiled based on information provided by 12,000 corporate executives throughout the world. A system of rating the banking systems of individual countries was conducted by participants answering a number of questions and rating the banks on a scale of one to seven, one being in need of government support seven being entirely healthy.

    Canada’s baking system, lead by Royal bank, CIBC, Scotiabank, TD Bank, Bank of Montreal and National Bank, received the highest rank in the world, scoring 6.8 on the rating scale.

    The top 10 safest countries for banking are currently as follows:

    Canada (6.8)
    Sweden (6.7)
    Luxembourg (6.7)
    Australia (6.7)
    Denmark (6.7)
    Netherlands (6.7)
    Belgium (6.6)
    New Zealand (6.6)
    Ireland (6.6)
    Malta (6.6)

    2008 Dec 30 07:43 AM Reply
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  • Japan has a national health system running on debt fumes and a national pension scheme (credits of which can be exchanged with SS's, for US expatriates here) running on the fantasy fumes of children that aren't being born in a nation that will not allow mass immigration. The government is deep in debt and towns are closing hospitals, declaring bankruptcy, and turning off lights during working hours to save money. Those government pensions aren't cutting it and crime among the elderly, especially shoplifting, is increasing. Recently a woman in her 70s stabbed a stranger solely because she knew she'd be fed, clothed, and taken care of in prison. The savings rate is dropping among the young, credit card are taking off (finally!), and "working poor" is a hot media topic. But it's still physically safe. That's Japan today. Tomorrow?
    2008 Dec 30 08:24 AM Reply
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  • Hi guess you don't live in Tokyo. As far I can see it, Japanese are at the top of the world in terms of consumer manias.

    Teen spend ALL of their time shopping for the most frivoulus things, and adults enjoy all kind of luxury shopping. All Prada, LV, Gucci, Bulgari, have their biggest stores here in Tokio.

    The reason for their saving is not that they do not consume, but it actually is in their productivity, they spend a lot, but they also produce a lot.

    To really see consumersim hell (or paradise) come to akihabara electronic district.


    On Dec 29 11:56 AM LuckyDragon wrote:

    > A big problem is the spending habits, or lack thereof, of the Japanese
    > consumer. These people are taught from an early age to save and not
    > spend and that is what they do. Ditto the Chinese. These countries
    > have to understand that being a part of an integrated world economy
    > means consuming as well as producing. How many countries is the US
    > consumer required to enrich? The Japanese worry about having enough
    > money in their old age. Perhaps the Japanese government should set
    > up a social security system.
    2008 Dec 31 09:32 AM Reply
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  • If you understand how much wealth has been accumulated in Japan, you would not be impressed with Akihibara at all.

    Remember Japan is the number 2 economy in the world, yet they completely depend on exports for growth. They have had 20 years to increase their domestic-driven growth and shift away from export dependency, but they have never really tried. In addition, they have jelously protected their domestic market against foreign competition.
    2009 Jan 02 04:12 AM Reply