Japan's battle with pandemic may mark end of Abe's
fiscal experiment
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[April 10, 2020] By
Leika Kihara and Tetsushi Kajimoto
TOKYO (Reuters) - The huge cost of the
coronavirus pandemic is upending Japan's seven-year experiment to rescue
the economy from its debt timebomb, as recession fears prompt calls for
"helicopter money" - unlimited spending bankrolled by the central bank.
Days after Prime Minister Shinzo Abe launched a nearly $1 trillion
stimulus package to battle the pandemic's financial fallout, some ruling
party lawmakers are calling for even bigger spending.
Already, the government plans to boost bond issuance to a five-year high
of 147 trillion yen ($1.35 trillion), or 30% of the size of Japan's
economy, to pay for the stimulus.
But even as global governments and central banks pull out all the stops
to reduce the economic fallout, Japan is a grim reminder that a debt
timebomb may be inescapable.
Japan could issue even more debt, as economy minister Yasutoshi
Nishimura has said the latest package won't be the last if growth
remains in danger.
The missed opportunity to fix Japan's finances may squeeze spending for
the younger generation and constrain the country's options for
supporting one of the world's fastest-ageing populations.
It also marks a death knell for premier Shinzo Abe's fiscal policy,
which relied on higher tax revenue backed by strong economic growth -
instead of painful spending cuts - to restore Japan's fiscal health,
analysts say.
"Abenomics has kept the economy in good shape for quite a long time,"
said former Bank of Japan board member Takahide Kiuchi, pointing to
Abe's stimulus policies, launched in late 2012 to pull the country out
of deflation.
"If that time had been spent fixing Japan's finances, the government
would have had more scope to boost spending without relying excessively
on debt issuance," he said. "The government and the BOJ were complacent.
They're responsible for this mess."
OUT THE WINDOW
Abe was elected in 2012 with a pledge to beat deflation through
Abenomics - a mix of aggressive fiscal and monetary stimulus steps with
structural reforms.
The plan was to stoke the economy enough so companies reaped profits and
paid more taxes. That, in turn, would let Japan reduce its huge debt
burden without spending cuts.
Abenomics pushed back against a view long preached by the powerful
finance ministry that without fiscal austerity, Japan couldn't fund the
rising cost of an ageing population.
Growth and inflation did perk up, but the time bought by the BOJ's
aggressive stimulus was not spent wisely.
Abe twice delayed a sales tax increase after the first one triggered
recession, forcing the finance ministry into retreat.
As fiscal hawks lost clout, spending continued to balloon and Abe's
administration pushed back the timeframe for meeting its target to
balance the budget.
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That was a defeat for BOJ Governor Haruhiko Kuroda, a former finance ministry
bureaucrat who consistently called for government efforts to keep Japan's fiscal
house in order while his central bank kept borrowing costs ultra-low.
But what was intended to be a quick fix to beat deflation turned into a
long-term battle, resulting in an unprecedented policy in which the BOJ has
pledged to cap long-term interest rates at zero.
The policy, dubbed yield curve control, gave lawmakers an excuse to keep
spending, without having to worry about an abrupt spike in bond yields.
"Under yield curve control, the BOJ can buy unlimited amounts of bonds if yields
rise," said Kazuo Momma, a former central bank executive who is now an economist
at Mizuho Research Institute. "The current low-rate, low-inflation environment
is a convenient one for huge government spending."
Now, Japan's economy is on the cusp of recession as the pandemic hits global and
domestic demand, emboldening proponents of loose fiscal policy.
Some ruling party lawmakers are urging for the central bank to provide unlimited
funding to the government to distribute as cash to the population.
Finance Minister Taro Aso said on Friday that the government had no plans to ask
the BOJ to finance its debt.
The idea, which is gaining traction in other economies, could be particularly
dangerous for Japan given its 1.13 quadrillion yen debt pile - the largest among
industrialised nations.
Even under current ultra-low borrowing costs, debt-servicing and social welfare
costs together make up 60% of Japan's annual spending, compared with just 5% for
education.
"The ballooning welfare and debt-servicing costs are suppressing other
spending," said Atsushi Takeda, chief economist at Itochu Economic Research
Institute. "The government is running out of capacity to allocate resources to
technological innovation, infrastructure rebuilding and talented human resources
- all crucial for economic growth."
But proponents say radical ideas are necessary to help Japan weather the
pandemic. Without huge spending backed by central bank money printing, Japan
will see a spike in job losses and bankruptcies that could delay an economic
recovery once the virus is contained, they argue.
"Crisis times like now are exactly when we need to deploy helicopter money,"
said Shoji Nishida, a senior ruling party official who has regular interaction
with Abe. "Fiscal reform should be thrown out the window."
(Reporting by Leika Kihara and Tetsushi Kajimoto; additional reporting by Kaori
Kaneko and Daniel Leussink. Editing by Gerry Doyle)
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