Three
Reasons Japan’s Economic Pain Is Getting Worse
Japan’s
economic problems are serious and getting worse. Foremost among them
is the crushing burden of government debt.
By
Jared Diamond
26
April, 2012
Japan’s
ratio of government debt to gross domestic product, currently about
2.28, is by far the highest in the industrial world, almost double
that of even Greece and Italy, and steadily growing. Already, the
combined costs of interest on that debt and social security are
approximately equal to total government tax revenue.
Japan’s
trade balance is about to go negative for the first time since 1980.
Land values and Nikkei stock values have fallen to about 30 percent
of 1989 levels. Now, educated young Japanese women are emigrating,
Japanese companies are shifting production overseas (even to the
U.S.), national politics are in gridlock (six prime ministers in the
past five years), and last year Japan experienced its first mass
street protests in decades.
The
economic troubles are symptoms of at least three sets of deeper
social problems. Regardless of what policies Japan now adopts, its
troubles can only increase unless those social problems are solved.
While all three of these also beset other industrial societies,
certain local attitudes make them more severe in Japan.
Marriage
and Babies
Throughout
the industrial world, birth rates are falling, and fewer people are
marrying. Japan’s rate (7.31 births per year per 1,000 people),
already the world’s lowest, is still dropping. If its rate of
decrease over the past two years is extrapolated, it reaches zero by
2017. Naturally, this dire outcome won’t actually happen, but the
calculation does emphasize that the problem is increasing.
In
the U.S. and most European countries, in contrast, birth rates are
still more than 10 per year per 1,000 people, and in Nigeria and
Tanzania, they are more than 40.
Japan’s
marriage rate is low, too, even by industrial-world standards: 5.8
marriages per year per 1,000 people, compared with 9.8 in the U.S.
The average age of marriage in Japan is now 31, and 18 percent of
Japanese women 35 to 39 have never been married.
These
numbers don’t reveal whether the reluctance to marry and to have
children is on the part of men, women or both. In the absence of
rigorous sociological polling, I’ll summarize interviews that
Japanese friends have conducted for me. They report that most single
adult Japanese still live with their parents, because it’s
comfortable to live at home and expensive to leave.
Young
Japanese feel more comfortable communicating with each other
electronically than by phone or in person. “Over the years that the
formerly widespread practice of arranged marriage almost completely
disappeared,” one person explained to me, “the digital revolution
made it increasingly difficult for Japanese to develop the social
skills necessary to woo a potential spouse themselves.” Among men,
the biggest reasons given for not marrying are worries about their
economic future and their ability to bear the responsibility for a
family.
Married
women tend to manage the household finances and take care of both
their own and their husbands’ parents, and many of them now swear
they will be the last generation to be saddled with those burdens.
Career women, who find strength in their education, jobs and earning
power, are capable of supporting themselves in the style to which
they aspire, and are buying condominiums and planning for their own
retirements. If they do want to marry, they find that their age is an
obstacle, because Japanese men over the age of 40 want much younger
women. If they do want children, Japanese societal support for
working mothers is low. Hence they either forgo children, or leave
the workforce or even leave Japan, and that represents a big loss of
human capital for the country.
Much
of what I have just said about marriage and babies applies to some
degree around the industrial world. Why should these issues be acute
in Japan? In most other countries, women’s new opportunities are
creating tension between men and women, but it has been manageable
because male society has made some accommodation. Japan is the
industrial country where women’s roles were, until recently, most
stereotyped; hence male resistance to women’s expectations is still
the greatest there.
Old
People, Immigrants
Again
throughout the industrial world, falling birth rates and improved
medical care have resulted in aging populations, making it harder to
fund retirement systems over the long term. Those trends reach their
extreme in Japan because of its record- low birth rate and relatively
healthy lifestyles. It is the country with the largest share of
population (22 percent) over 65 years of age. Except for Monaco, it
also has the longest life expectancy, 84 years.
But
numbers alone don’t indicate the extent of the problems. After all,
the percentage of the population over 65 in other First World
countries is between 14 percent and 20 percent. What makes the
problem so serious in Japan is the country’s refusal to do what
other countries have done: admit massive immigration of younger
people from overseas. It is very difficult to immigrate to Japan, and
(having immigrated) even harder to obtain citizenship. Japan is the
world’s most homogeneous large country.
This
rejection of immigration not only bodes ill for the future of Japan’s
retirement system, but also deprives the country of the pool of
workers, artists, scientists and inventors that immigrants represent
for the U.S., Western Europe and Australia. Many notable Americans
have been immigrants or their children. The long list includes, in
recent times, Albert Einstein, Sergei Rachmaninoff, Vladimir Nabokov,
Wernher von Braun, Henry Kissinger and our current president.
Differences in immigration policies contribute directly to the big
gap between the U.S. and Japan in Nobel Prizes. The U.S. leads the
world in those awards, while Japan wins few despite high government
outlays for science.
Scientific
advances are essential to a technology-based economy. Thus, while
immigration creates big problems, lack of it creates bigger ones.
Non-Sustainable
Resources
No
industrialized country is self-sufficient in renewable natural
resources, especially forest products and seafood. Some must be
imported.
If
the world’s forests and fisheries were well managed, forest
products and seafood could be harvested sustainably in perpetuity.
Unfortunately, most harvesting is destructive and non-sustainable.
Most of the world’s major fisheries are declining or have already
collapsed.
Hence
many government agencies and nongovernmental organizations around the
world are working toward sustainability. One might naively predict
that Japan, a small country that is one of the most dependent on
resource imports, would be the world’s leading promoter of
sustainability. But the reverse is true: Japan may be the First World
country most opposed to sustainable policies. Its imports of
illegally sourced and unsustainably harvested forest products are
much higher than those of the U.S. or European Union countries,
whether calculated on a per-capita basis or as a percentage of total
forest product imports.
And
Japan is a world leader in opposing prudent regulation of fishing and
whaling. Incredibly, in 2010, Japan saw it as a great diplomatic
triumph that it blocked international protection for
Atlantic/Mediterranean bluefin tuna -- even though the fish, whose
stocks are declining, is especially prized and widely consumed in
Japan.
Even
my Japanese friends are puzzled by this stance. They suggest three
explanations. First, Japanese people see themselves as living in
harmony with nature, and until recently they did expertly manage
their own forests -- though not the overseas forests and fisheries
that they exploit. Second, national pride causes the Japanese to
dislike bowing to international pressure. The country especially does
not want to give in to the anti-whaling campaign of the Sea Shepherd
conservation organization, even though few Japanese eat whale meat;
the whaling industry operates at a big loss; and tsunami relief funds
have had to be diverted to subsidize whaling escort ships.
Finally,
because Japan is aware of its own limited home resources, it has for
the past 140 years maintained at all costs, as the core of its
national security, its right of unrestricted access to the world’s
natural resources. In today’s times of declining availability, that
insistence is no longer viable.
To
an outside admirer of Japan like me, its opposition to sustainable
resource use seems sad and self-destructive. Unrealistic quests for
resources drove the country to self- destructive behavior once
before, when it made war simultaneously on China, the U.S., the U.K.,
Australia, New Zealand and the Netherlands. Defeat today is as
inevitable as it was then -- this time, not by military conquest, but
by exhaustion of both renewable and nonrenewable natural resources.
If I were the evil dictator of another country who hated Japan and
wanted to ruin it without resort to war, I would do exactly what
Japan is now doing to itself: destroy the overseas resource bases on
which it depends.
The
Future
Since
Japan’s economic problems result from its social problems, their
solution will require changes in Japanese attitudes toward women’s
roles, immigration and sustainable resource use. Can Japan undertake
the painful reappraisals this will require?
One
cause for cautious optimism is the country’s history. Twice in
modern times, Japan has accomplished selective change. The most
drastic example came with the Meiji Restoration that began in 1868.
The forced opening of ports by Commodore Perry in 1853-54 raised the
specter that Japan might be taken over by Western powers. But the
country saved itself with a crash program: It ended its isolation
from the outside world and jettisoned its shogun leader, its samurai
class, its feudal land system and its ban on guns. It adopted a
constitution, a cabinet government, a national army,
industrialization, a European-style banking system, a new school
system and much Western clothing, food and music.
At
the same time, it retained its emperor, language, writing system and
most of its culture. Japan thereby not only preserved its
independence, but also became the first non- Western country to rival
the West in wealth and power.
Again,
after World War II, Japan made drastic selective changes, abandoning
its military tradition and its notion of a divine emperor in favor of
adopting democracy and developing an export economy.
Once
again, Japan can selectively reappraise its core values, let go of
those that no longer make sense, and retain the ones that still do
and that give the country strength.
So
far, however, this doesn’t seem to be happening.
(Jared
Diamond, a professor of geography at the University of
California, Los Angeles, is the author of “Guns,
Germs and Steel” and “Collapse.”
The opinions expressed are his own.)
Here
is a video of Jared Diamond explaining why societies collapse
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