Abenomics Tries To Make Sure Japan Is Going Down Swinging
Wolf
Richter'
1 May, 2013
Anecdotal
evidence has been piling up in Japan. Lamborghini sales in fiscal
2012, ended March 31, hit the highest level in 14 years. Ferrari
sales jumped 40% for
the first quarter.Luxury retailers forecast fat profits. “The
sudden improvement in the stock market has led to a big rise in sales
at our department stores for luxury brands and high-end goods like
jewelry, precious metals, and watches,” said Ryoichi
Yamamoto, president of J. Front Retailing Co.
The
rich – beneficiaries of the Bank of Japan’s phenomenal
money-printing binge – are spending, even if it’s not on products
made in Japan.
Now
we have the first trickle of statistical evidence. Much of it came in
one fell swoop, appropriately enough, during Golden Week, which has
nothing to do with gold and isn’t even a week, but a series of
holidays interspersed with a few work days. Overall retail sales
were down 0.3% in March from prior year, but large-scale
retailers booked
a 2.4% gain.
Spending by households of two or more persons jumped
5.2% in
March from prior year. Part of it was ascribed to warmer
temperatures, the rest to the stock market.
“This
is the effect of Abenomics,” explained Yuichi Kodama, chief
economist at Meiji Yasuda Life Insurance Co., giddily
oblivious to
the misery that asset bubbles leave behind, including the epic bubble
in Japan that burst in 1989; to this day, the economy stumbles over
its detritus. But everybody loves bubbles on the way up. They make
people forget the aftermath of prior bubbles. They make economists
and central bankers say stupid things. They make rational people
giddy.
But
Abenomics wisely didn’t take credit for the unemployment
rate that
inched down in March to 4.1% from 4.3% – due to women dropping out
of the workforce. The number of employed people grew by 310,000 over
the 12-month period, to 62.46 million, a solid improvement in a
country with a declining working-age population. But that was
underway before Shinzo Abe was hoisted to the perch of Prime
Minister.
Another
trend Abenomics couldn’t take credit for: housing starts rose 6.2%
for the 12-month period through March, the third
year in a row of growth.
Among them, starts for rental homes soared 10.7%. Even industrial
output increased in March, for the fourth
month in a row,
if by a less-than-hoped-for 0.2% month to month. A beginning. For the
12-month period, output was still down 7.3%. Based on the recent
improvements, the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry increased
its assessment for the future. Optimism is winding its way back into
the economic fabric.
If
Japan is going to go down under its load of debt, Abenomics will make
sure it’s going down swinging. Two weeks ago, the Lower House
passed the ¥92.6 trillion budget, of which46.3%
has to be borrowed.
Once the “supplementary budgets” are thrown on top of it, halfof
all government expenditures have to be borrowed. Abenomics sticks to
the old playbook, the one that didn’t work before: spending on
public works projects will jump 15.6%. That budget feeds the
corporate and individual welfare state. But no one wants to pay for
it. Borrow it instead.
Alas,
someone will end up paying for it. And it’s not going to be the
taxpayer, as the budget makes clear. It’s going to be the direct or
indirect owners of Japan’s debt, it’s going to be savers and
anyone with assets. Yup, taxpayers. Abenomics is conjuring a bout of
inflation.
In
patriotic support, companies are busy raising prices. McDonalds
announced proudly that it would jack up the price of some burgers by
25%! The first increase since 2008. Double-digit energy price
increases have already whacked consumers and businesses. Now the
government confirmed its success story: inflation has arrived!
The
preliminary all-items
index for
the Tokyo area for April, a precursor for the national index, showed
inflation of 0.3% month to month, reducing deflation for the 12-month
period to 0.7%. Goods were up 0.4% – annualized about 5% inflation!
Services rose 0.2%. Almost every item was up. Fuel 1.3%, clothes and
footwear 2.2%, in one month! The national index for March, which lags
the Tokyo index by a month, showed a monthly inflation of 0.2%,
cutting deflation for the 12-month period to 0.9%. This is just the
beginning. At this pace, Abenomics will meet the 2% inflation target
early.
But
the 2% target is just a cover. The BOJ will allow inflation to spiral
“out of control” while keeping its iron knee on yields. Inflation
will eat into the wealth of savers and retirees, the generation that
benefited the most from funding much of the welfare state with debt.
It will eat into wages. It will cause mayhem and pain, but gradually,
rather than suddenly. In the process, it will diminish the debt's
weight. Abenomics seems to have chosen that strategy as a lesser evil
– because, as Vice Finance Minister Takehiko Nakao pointed out in
a hilarious
understatement,
“A debt ratio of 245% of GDP is not really safe.”
And
here is a powerful, musical appeal (with lyrical text in English) to
the Japanese that slams the nuclear industry and its shenanigans, the
mainstream media, bureaucrats, and politicians.... "humanERROR"
by the Japanese rock group "Frying Dutchman"
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