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[A-List] The risk of deflation/The Economist/Marx
The risk of deflation
Comparing symptoms
Nov 7th 2002
>From The Economist print edition
Can lower interest rates prevent the spread of debt-deflation to
America and Europe?
STOCKMARKETS rose in expectation of the Federal Reserve's
half-point cut in interest rates on November 6th to 1.25%, the
lowest rate for more than 40 years. The following day, the
European Central Bank and the Bank of England decided not to cut
their rates, but they are still expected to ease next month.
However, investors' exuberance is odd, for interest rates are
coming down because the world economy is in worse shape than had
been hoped.
America's recovery is stalling, as consumers tighten their belts.
In the euro area, consumer and business confidence are both on
the wane. Although euro-area inflation is above the 2% ceiling
set by the ECB, weak demand will push inflation down next year.
The case for interest-rate cuts in both America and the euro area
was strong, even though the ECB has not yet moved. But will rate
cuts work?
Most policymakers in America and Europe blame Japan's slump on
mistakes--which they can avoid. An alternative view is that much
of Japan's economic sickness is the inevitable after-effect of
its bubble in the 1980s. Asset-price bubbles tend to be followed
by periods of weak growth, as financial excesses are unwound. The
table attempts, in unscientific fashion, to assess the risks of
America and Germany catching the Japanese disease.
America's STOCKMARKET BUBBLE in the late 1990s mirrored Japan's
of a decade earlier. Its housing market has also been looking
suspiciously like a bubble--though with less froth than Japan's.
More surprising, German share prices rose, and then fell, by more
than America's. Indeed, at its low point in October, Germany's
DAX index was almost 70% below its peak. On the other hand, fewer
Germans own shares than do Americans.
The other aspect of the bubbles in Japan and America was a surge
in CORPORATE INVESTMENT, based on cheap capital and unrealistic
expectations about future profits--often inflated by shady
accounting practices. By and large, German business escaped such
overinvestment.
The most serious aspect of Japan's economic sickness is
DEFLATION. Falling prices have increased real debt burdens,
depressed consumer spending, and made it impossible for the Bank
of Japan to deliver the negative real interest rates that the
economy needs to revive demand. It is often argued that the
central bank was too slow to cut rates after the stockmarket
collapsed. Yet in fact Japan's economy initially held up much
better than America's. In relation to GDP growth and the size of
Japan's output gap--a big influence on inflation--the Bank of
Japan cut interest rates as rapidly as the Fed did last year.
America does not yet have deflation. Still, its GDP deflator fell
to 0.8% in the year to the third quarter; so long as the level of
GDP remains below potential, inflation will keep falling.
Deflation currently seems unlikely in Britain or the euro area as
a whole, but Germany is at risk. German consumer prices have
fallen at an annual rate of 0.4% over the past six months. More
worryingly, Germany, unlike Japan in the early 1990s or America
today, is not free to cut interest rates or run a looser fiscal
policy. Interest rates are set by the ECB on the basis of
economic conditions in the whole euro area, and budget deficits
are limited by the European Union's stability pact. The risk of
deflation may therefore be greater in Germany than in America.
Deflation is particularly deadly when an economy has lots of
DEBT, because falling prices swell the real debt burden. In
America and Germany, firms and households have borrowed heavily
in recent years, lifting total debts of the non-financial private
sector to 150% and 160% of GDP respectively. In the early 1990s
Japan's debt burden was equivalent to almost 250% of GDP.
Japanese firms are still much more in hock than those in America
or Germany. On the other hand, American households look more
vulnerable. Even at the peak of Japan's bubble, households
remained big savers. Last year German households saved as much as
10% of their income; Americans saved only 1.5%.
A cocktail of debt and deflation has left Japanese BANKS crippled
by bad loans, forcing them to cut lending. American banks are in
better shape; and the economy is less dependent on banks, relying
more on capital markets for finance. Even so, concerns are
growing about the threat of a credit crunch, as conditions
tighten in America's corporate-bond market.
German banks look shakier, with poor profitability and shrinking
capital as share prices have fallen--as in Japan. Increased
competition and the need to lift profits is putting pressure on
banks to reduce their traditional relationship lending, resulting
in a collapse in new bank lending to small and medium-sized
firms. This form of credit crunch has a different cause to the
one in Japan, but its effect of exacerbating the downturn is
similar.
Germany scores badly on another symptom of the Japan disease.
America's flexible and competitive markets should force firms to
cut excess capacity and labour more quickly and so restore
profits. By contrast, Japanese firms have been slow to cut excess
capacity, thanks to a raft of STRUCTURAL RIGIDITIES. Germany,
too, suffers from rigid labour and product markets. German
industry also has a cross-shareholding structure that partly
echoes the KEIRETSU system in Japan, which hinders the
weeding-out of inefficient firms.
In Japan government subsidies and interest rates at zero have
kept inefficient firms afloat and so delayed restructuring.
American firms are under greater market discipline; on the other
hand, consumers need more discipline to save more. The Fed's low
interest rates have merely postponed this adjustment.
One other big difference is that America does not suffer the same
POLITICAL PARALYSIS as Japan. If politicians fail to deliver
recovery, they will be replaced. The same may be true of Germany;
but, worryingly, in other ways Germany displays a political and
social resistance to structural reform similar to Japan's.
America's DEMOGRAPHICS are more favourable than Japan's, where
the population is both shrinking and ageing. A shrinking labour
force implies a slower growth rate, future problems for financing
public-sector pensions, and greater opposition to reform than in
a more youthful country. Germany again appears similar to Japan.
Its working-age population is expected to shrink by 0.2% a year
over the next decade, compared with likely annual growth in
America of around 1%.
Our analysis suggests that Germany has more symptoms of the
Japanese disease than America. America's bigger bubble infected
its economy more severely; but its more flexible markets and
institutions should now help it to adjust. For now, both
countries remain in danger.
Policymakers dismiss the risk of deflation--just as in 1990 it
would have seemed far-fetched to predict that Japan would enter a
deflationary slump that would last for more than a decade. Yet as
Marx reminds us: history repeats itself first as tragedy, then as
farce.
Article at:
http://www.economist.com/finance/displayStory.cfm?story_id=143389
1
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