Abenomics fails to deliver as Japan braces for post-Abe
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[August 28, 2020] By
Leika Kihara and Takaya Yamaguchi
TOKYO (Reuters) - Japanese Prime Minister
Shinzo Abe's signature shock-and-awe 'Abenomics' stimulus strategy was
already faltering even before his decision on Friday to step down due to
health reasons.
That blunt assessment by many Japan observers underlined the daunting
political challenge Abe has faced in his efforts to pull the economy out
of decades of economic stagnation.
And the coronavirus crisis may have just put the final nail in the
coffin to his 'three arrows' reform programme as the economy sinks
deeper into recession, analysts say.
After sweeping to power in late 2012, Abe deployed his three arrows of
Abenomics - large-scale monetary easing, fiscal spending and structural
reforms - to reignite the world's third biggest economy after years of
subpar growth and falling prices.
There were some quick-hit successes.
The Bank of Japan's "bazooka" stimulus programme lifted business
sentiment and helped weaken the yen, giving exporters windfall profits
that trickled down to wages and new jobs.
Corporate governance reforms drew in huge amounts of overseas money,
pushing up foreign ownership of Japan's listed stocks to a record 31.7%
in 2014 from 28% in 2012. It stood at 29.6% in 2019.
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"We were able to end 20 years of deflation with the three arrows of
Abenomics," the prime minister told a news conference on Friday
announcing his resignation, when asked what he thought were his
legacies.
But Abe will leave behind a pile of unfinished business for his
successor.
"The focus at the moment will be on the coronavirus recovery and
controlling the infection, regardless of who will be the next prime
minister," said Takeshi Minami, chief economist at Norinchukin Research
Institute.
"There has been talk that Abenomics has been having a harmful impact, so
I think the focal point will be on suggestions how to make changes to
it."
The biggest disappointment for the prime minister, and many Japan
observers, is that the third-arrow reforms to reshape an economy hobbled
by low productivity, a rapidly ageing population and a rigid labour
market, have proved elusive.
"Abenomics has singularly failed to deliver Japan the domestic
conditions that would spark higher growth beyond more reliance on
external demand," said Brian Kelly, Managing Partner at Asian Century
Quest.
PAYING THE PRICE
Now, Japan is paying the price as COVID-19 wipes out the short-term
benefits brought by Abenomics, such as an inbound tourism boom, reflated
growth and rising job availability.
Abe's failure to entice companies to spend more on capital expenditure
has given Japan Inc a huge cash-pile that served as a liquidity buffer
to weather the pandemic's shock.
But the experience may give firms an excuse to keep hoarding cash rather
than spend on new business opportunities, which could stifle innovation
and weigh on Japan's potential growth - factors Abe was focussed on
addressing through the third arrow.
"COVID-19 may have reassured corporate executives that cash is indeed
king," said Hideo Hayakawa, a senior fellow at the Tokyo Foundation for
Policy Research. "My fear is that companies may feel even more inclined
to save rather than spend."
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Japan's Prime Minister
Shinzo Abe wearing a protective face mask arrives at his official
residence, amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak, in
Tokyo, Japan August 28, 2020. REUTERS/Issei Kato
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Social distancing policies and other business constrains to contain the virus
may cripple potential growth - already low due to slow progress in deregulating
highly-protected medical and agriculture industries, and accepting more foreign
workers to address chronic labour shortages.
Japan's potential growth rate, which used to exceed 4% in the 1980s, slid near
zero last year from around 1% before Abenomics began, according to BOJ
estimates.
"Structural reform, or the third arrow, has been the declaring failure of
Abenomics," said Samuel Tombs, chief U.K. economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics.
"Even the government's signature immigration reform last year was much ado about
nothing, in practice."
DEFLATIONARY MINDSET
COVID-19 also dashed a grand experiment of Abenomics that aimed to turn around
Japan's "deflationary mindset," in which companies and households hold off on
spending on expectations that low growth and wages will persist.
The economy stumbled to a record contraction in the second quarter that shrank
nominal gross domestic product (GDP) to 507 trillion yen ($4.8 trillion), around
levels marked in 2013 and far distant from Abe's 600-trillion-yen target.
(Click here for an interactive graphic of real and nominal GDP since 2011:
https://tmsnrt.rs/2Fwq2JK)
For a graphic on Japan's economy posted a record drop in second-quarter:
https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
gfx/editorcharts/yzdpxnmewpx/eikon.png
"Japan's economy may have performed better after Abenomics, but not enough to
change public sentiment dramatically," said Yoshiki Shinke, chief economist at
Dai-ichi Life Research Institute.
"With the pandemic, we'll likely see growth fall further. With many legacies of
Abenomics wiped out, we know now there was no magic wand to fix Japan's chronic
woes," he said.
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Moreover, with the BOJ having exhausted its tool-kit to achieve its elusive 2%
inflation target, policymakers face the challenge of seeking to revive the
economy with a dearth of ammunition.
Japan's huge debt also limits room for big fiscal spending, which may keep any
economic recovery weak, analysts say.
"Japan failed to normalise monetary and fiscal policies when the economy was in
better shape," said former BOJ board member Takahide Kiuchi. "Now, it's paying
the price."
(Reporting by Leika Kihara and Takaya Yamaguchi, additional reporting by
Tetsushi Kajimoto, Kaori Kaneko and Daniel Leussink; Editing by Shri Navaratnam)
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