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Japan: Slowly Going Broke

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  • Japan: Slowly Going Broke

    From Bill Bonner

    12/29/09 Ouzilly, France We reported that the US government would need to roll over $2.5 trillion worth of debt next year. We probably erred. The number was right, but it was meant to be over the next two years. During the next two years also, worldwide, banks need to roll over $7 trillion. Whether it is over one year or two years, we’re talking big money.

    Most people who bother to think about it are coming to the conclusion that this is very inflationary…and very bullish for gold. They think the Fed will need to “monetize the debt” directly, or indirectly. One way or another, they say, the central bank will have to increase the volume of money so that the government can finance its deficits.

    Paul Krugman, Nobel Prize winner in economics, suggested that the Fed add another $2 trillion to the nation’s monetary base, partly to accommodate federal borrowing…and, he believes, to stimulate employment.

    This idea is widespread. Richard Koo, one of the few economists to understand the Japanese depression and what awaits the US, thinks along similar lines. The US economy is going into a depression, like Japan; the government must spend huge amounts of money in order to keep GDP from falling.

    Japan’s top man shocked the nation last week when he announced the largest budget deficit ever. The government will spend about $1 trillion – a new record. And it will collect less than half that much in taxes. Meaning, most of what the Japanese government spends is borrowed – something the Japanese haven’t done since the days when Americans were dropping bombs on them.

    The Japanese government is doing what it should do, says Koo. It is replacing missing private spending with public spending. So doing, it has avoided a drop in GDP and employment. Throughout its 20 year slump, Japan’s GDP has never fallen below the peak set in 1989. Nor has unemployment ever risen above 6%. Bravo!

    Bravo?

    Thanks to this new budget, Japan’s national debt will reach a new record…nearly 200% of GDP. The Japanese have a lot of private savings, but they also have a lot of public debt. And what have they gotten for it? Well, they have kept people employed…and have allowed the private sector to pay down its debts. Or, to put it another way, they have lived through a classic depression fairly comfortably. Instead of forcing the banks to fess up to their mistakes and clean up their balance sheets, the Japanese government saved them. Instead of allowing big companies to go broke…and other companies to take their places…the Japanese propped up the ‘brain dead’ firms…and kept them alive with taxpayers’ money. Result? A depression that should have been over in, say, 5 years…has been stretched out to 20. And now the Japanese face a public debt that is bound to cause them big problems in the years ahead…. What kind of problems?

    Well, Japan is going broke… just like the US.

    http://dailyreckoning.com/japan-slowly-going-broke/
    Outside of a dog, a book is man's best friend. Inside of a dog, it's too dark to read. -Groucho

  • #2
    Re: Japan: Slowly Going Broke

    Fed's Master Plan Revealed....

    Originally posted by Master Shake View Post

    Thanks to this new budget, Japan’s national debt will reach a new record…nearly 200% of GDP. The Japanese have a lot of private savings, but they also have a lot of public debt. And what have they gotten for it? Well, they have kept people employed…and have allowed the private sector to pay down its debts. Or, to put it another way, they have lived through a classic depression fairly comfortably. Instead of forcing the banks to fess up to their mistakes and clean up their balance sheets, the Japanese government saved them. Instead of allowing big companies to go broke…and other companies to take their places…the Japanese propped up the ‘brain dead’ firms…and kept them alive with taxpayers’ money. Result? A depression that should have been over in, say, 5 years…has been stretched out to 20. And now the Japanese face a public debt that is bound to cause them big problems in the years ahead….
    Bushito

    Obamasan

    and their pointless successors....

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Japan: Slowly Going Broke

      Originally posted by don View Post
      Fed's Master Plan Revealed....



      Bushito

      Obamasan

      and their pointless successors....
      We are soooo...totally screwed.

      Comment


      • #4
        Originally posted by Master Shake View Post
        companies to take their places…the Japanese propped up the ‘brain dead’ firms…and kept them alive with taxpayers’ money. Result? A depression that should have been over in, say, 5 years… has been stretched out to 20. And now the Japanese face a public debt that is bound to cause them big problems in the years ahead…. What kind of problems?

        http://dailyreckoning.com/japan-slowly-going-broke/
        wonderful ... an omniscient being finally tells us when Japan's "depression" might have been over if they'd done things differently.

        the old, rigorous, empirically-proven analysis technique called "pull a number out of your ass with zero justification"

        Let's bow down to the almighty "knowledge" of the all-knowing BB.

        Yeah, if Japan had done things differently, Japan would NOT have lost the lead in fermentation & optics technologies, Korea and Taiwan would NOT have eaten Japan's lunch 30 years ago on the low side, Korea & Taiwan would NOT now be eating Japan's lunch on the high side, China would NOT have eaten the low side, Japanese companies would NOT have offshored to China, and China would NOT now be creeping up to the high margin side ... and this list is only the start ...

        edit: Not saying he's wrong ... just my gut level response to reading it. It slipped my mind for a minute that Bonner basically preaches to the choir, no need to repeat your analysis - everyone who reads you knows the shorthand. If I didn't know better I might suspect that Bonner was an Austrian
        Last edited by Spartacus; December 31, 2009, 01:38 PM.

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