japan’s economic miracle. not that long ago japan was the economic model for the world i finished...
TRANSCRIPT
Not That Long Ago Japan Was The Economic Model For The World
• I finished my Undergrad in in 90s and we were still exploring the Japanese management style
• Which by the way was started by an American consultant in Japan
80s & 90s
• Widespread thought among thoughts leaders, politicians, business leaders, & the media that Japan had discovered a new business model
• This model was going to allow Japan to overtake the US economy in just a few short years
Chalmers Johnson
• A political scientist named Chalmers Johnson wrote MITI and the Japanese Miracle– Required reading in my business program at TOSU
• MITI was reorganized into the Ministry of Economy, Trade, and Industry (METI) in 2001
• This is a cabinet branch of Japan’s gov• Clyde Prestowitz, former US trade negotiator– Trading Places: How We Are Giving Our Future to
Japan and How to Reclaim It
Quote From Prestowitz
• The power behind the Japanese juggernaut is much greater than most Americans suspect, and the juggernaut cannot stop of its own volition, for Japan has created a kind of automatic wealth machine, perhaps the first since King Midas
Michael Crichton
• From the 1992 novel Rising Sun– Sooner or later, the United States must come to
grips with the fact that Japan has become the leading industrial nation in the world. The Japanese have the longest lifespan. The have the highest employment, the highest literacy, the smallest gap between rich and poor. Their manufacturing products have the highest quality….
As late as 1995
• A book by a journalist—Blindside: Why Japan Is Still on Track to Overtake the US by the Year 2000 by Eamonn Fingleton
Starting in the 70s – 90s
• Japanese companies loomed large
• Japanese firms were earning really high profits
• Japanese investors that making big investments in the US
Business Schools
• They suggested that other countries were sure to follow the Japanese path, including Europe, and the US was past its zenith
• The business schools offered doom if we did not follow that path
What Was Japan’s Unique and Special Path
• Greater government direction of the economy worked better than unfettered free market forces– Government-directed business firms– Managed trade– Patient capital
The Visible Hand of Government Can Outperform the Invisible Hand of
Markets• MITI became a symbol of how government
can direct an economy
Managed Trade
• A mix of blocking imports from other countries and offering subsidies to exporting firms, with the result being large trade surpluses
Ownership of Firms
• Ownership of firms was not stock market based like in the US
• Keiretsu—combinations of firms acting together
Econ Rocketed From 60s – Early 90s
1960-1969
1970-1979
1980-1989
1990-1999
2000-2006
Current0
2
4
6
8
10
12
Japan's Growth Rate by Decade
Japan's Growth Rate by Decade
1970s & 1980s
• The 70s was a slow period of growth for the whole world, but Japan still averaged 4.5 to 5 percent growth
• 1980s saw growth slow a bit to 4 percent per year, but even that was better than the US
Japan’s Growth
• On a per capita GDP basis, Japan was growing about 5% a year on average from 1960 to 1985
• The US economy was growing less than 2 percent a year during the same period
Japan’s Growth
• In 1960, Japan’s economy was about 10% the size of the US economy
• By the early 1970s, Japan had surpassed Germany to become the second-largest economy
• By the early 1990s, Japan’s economy was about two-thirds the size of the US economy
• On a per capita basis, it was about 85% of the US economy
Some Measures
• In 1950, half of the students leaving high school and middle school wen into agriculture
• By 1965, only 5% of those leaving high school and middle school went into agriculture
All Went Wrong in the Early 1990s
• Collapse of asset prices• Real estate prices fell about 80 percent• Massive numbers of corporate and personal
bankruptcy• Unemployment surged• Economic growth in the 1990s and into the
21st century averaged 1 percent a year or less
How to Fix the Economy
• Tried huge budget deficits to increase AD• Central Bank cut interest rates to near zero• Japan’s economy is aging– The workers are getting older and older– They have a demographic nightmare that is even
worse than the US
Remember the Automatic Wealth Machine
• Leading industrial nation in the world• Overtake the US in just a few years• All that hype from every B-school in America
and then nothing
• Is it possible that the fundamental analysis of why Japan grew so fast was misguided
???
• The statements about Japan’s special economic model, about managed trade, and government intervention are true
• The statements that Japan grew very rapidly are true
• There must be a basic logical problem
All in the Interpretation
• Imagine that I said in the US, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) helped to start the Internet.
• Therefore the entire high tech economy was created by the government
• And based on government oversight of the US economy
Boring, But Economic Story
• This Japanese profit making machine story was exciting, but it ignored the fundamentals
• Growth is all about– Human capital– Investment– Free markets
How Japan Got the Economic Fundamentals Right
• Human Capital– Japan was an early strong investor in education
Savings
• National savings in the US typically has been 15% - 18% of GDP
• In Japan, national savings has been 30% - 35% of GDP
• Why does Japan save so much?– The big difference is that households save much
more than the US
Why Japan Has Such High Savings
• Lower proportion of elderly
• Wages paid with a big chunk in end-of-year bonuses
• Rapid growth makes it easier to save
Why Japan Has Such High Savings
• Coming out of WWII
• Special tax breaks for savings accounts
• Underdeveloped Social Security requires individuals to save more
Japan’s Technology
• Since back in the 19th century Japan has worked hard to get new techno in businesses
• Current R&D spending is similar to US levels
Participated in World Free Markets
• We know that companies like Toyota, Sony, Honda, Panasonic to be strong competitors in international market
• These and others were responsible for innovations and new international business practices– Just-in-time inventory
– Philosophy of continuous product improvement (kaizen)
– Quality circles—groups that focus on quality in the plant
They Are All Together or Are They
• In the high growth period between the 50s and the 80s, Japan had more strikes than Germany or Sweden– Not managed by consensus as some think
Why Growth
• Not what I learned in college• Just boring fundamentals– Education– Investment– Technological– Free international markets– Innovation
Did Japan Take Unfair Advantage?• Back to industrial policy and managed trade• After the war Japan’s government offered subsidies—
often in the form of cheaper loans—to favored industries– Ship-building– Electric power– Synthetic fibers– Chemical fertilizers– Petrochemicals– Machine tools– Steel– Coal– electronics
How Did This Policy Work Overall?
• Steel and electronics flourished others did not do as well
• Economic studies show that high growth sectors: electrical machinery, general machinery, transportation equipment received lower subsidies than
• Low-growth sectors: textiles, mining, processed food
There Are Always Two Questions You Can Ask About Government Industrial Policy
• Is it possible to pick the future winners consistently?
• If yes, can you pick the winners and not be politically favored to give money to the losers instead?
In Japan?
• In Japan it seems very unlikely that the government bureaucrats picked the winners
• An example of a misstep. HDTV they were sure that HD was the future. But their focus was analog not digital and gov helped this doomed idea
Another example
• Fifth generation computer project– No idea what one through four were– But we were scared about that 5th one– What happened?• I do not know• Everyone talk about how it would take over• And how Japanese investment would take it to the top• It just faded away
Just Remember That There Is Strength In Market
• No markets are not perfect but
• Competition has a basic advantage– Many firms are trying different things from
different angles—trying to get profit without the help of the government
– This process improves the overall chance of success
– If there is a bad idea, drop it
Japan’s Barriers to Trade
• Japan had 5% of world exports in 1965 and 9% of world exports in 1990
• Japan’s imports have been about 7% of GDP and its exports about 9% in recent years
• In the US imports and exports are 12-13% of GDP
• Many industrialized counties are closer to 25%
Not Sure What This Proves
• Clearly it states that small European nations trade more than larger and more isolated countries
• Still it is interesting that it is such a small part of their Economy
• Over time US imports and exports have been about 2% of our economy
Why Do We Think Japan Is Dependent On Trade?
• The fact that we believe this may be an indication of our own short-sightedness
• We see Japanese products in high profile products like cars and electronics– Then we assume that because we see these
products, they must be a big part of their economy– After all, I see it in America so it must be important
in Japan– That logic does not work
Trade Surpluses
• Trade surplus does not indicate anything about the fairness of trade– There is no question that Japan has very large
trade surpluses– A common misperception is that surplus always
mean a country is unfair– Remember that trade deficits can because by
many reasons• One reason is high saving—like Japan• The same apply to the US in reverse
Beyond the Stories
• Japan does not have a great amount of explicit protectionism– It does not have high tariffs– Does not have many quotas– If they are not explicit they must come through
some bureaucratic path• It is true that Japan is full of gov regulations• Has powerful trade associations• They do try to shut out import occasionally
70-80 & 90-00
• We heard these stories in the 70s and 80s when all was well
• But we still hear them and all is bad
• It is possible that they had plain strong growth and all of these policies that we thought caused the growth were not needed and may have even been wasteful
High Rates of Saving
• While the Japanese wanted to save more—I should note that the government actively restricted how they could save
• Japanese government controlled the banking and financial sector for decades after WWII
• Consumers were encouraged to put their money in banks and that was basically the only place to invest
• Consumer loans were discouraged through tax incentives
High Rate of Saving
• This high saving rate translated into banks flush with money
• Most of that financial capitalwas directed to Japanese corporations
• Would this work in US—I doubt it. They restricted consumer loans. Even after the housing market crash, we still love loans
Is This High Saving Unfair
• It has had an effect– But it is probably not a clever plan by MIDI and
Japanese bureaucrats to advance the country—ultimately they select whether to save or not
• Back to the boring. Not a new model of money creation. Just good fundamentals: good education, r&d, investment, competing in world markets