Friday 7 June 2013

JAPAN’S “THREE-ARROW” POLICY

The Washington Post

JAPAN’S SHINZO ABE UNDERWHELMING PACKAGE OF ECONOMIC REFORMS

Editorial Board

The Washington Post, June 7, 2013

JAPAN HAS been in a state of economic stagnation for much of the past two decades. The United States would benefit if this important ally could reverse that trend, aiding not only Japan’s own well-being and national security but also the balance of power in Northeast Asia.

The good news is that there is broad consensus about what ails Japan, and a new prime minister, Shinzo Abe, has come into office determined to act. Mr. Abe has fired the first two “arrows” in his “three-arrow” policy, aiming them at fiscal and monetary policy with the goal of ending Japan’s chronic deflation. His government is spending heavily on infrastructure, and the Bank of Japan has embarked on a massive asset-buying program.

Aggressive as these policies are, enacting them was relatively simple, politically, relative to tackling the third source of Japan’s woes: a vast web of regulations, subsidies and trade barriers whose net effect has been to support inefficient sectors, and the voters who live off them, at the expense of growth and innovation. Japanese productivity has remained essentially flat for the past two decades, a dangerous state of affairs in a country with a shrinking labor force and a growing dependent elderly population.

The politically powerful agriculture sector illustrates how self-defeating Japanese policy can be. Economists Takeo Hoshi, now at Stanford University, and Anil K. Kashyap of the University of Chicago have calculated that Japan’s farms got $53 billion in subsidies in 2010, an amount equal to the total value they added to the economy. In other words, farming made zero net contribution to Japan’s national income.

(...) [article here]

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