Abenomics, the enduring legacy of Shinzo by Atanu Biswas
The strategy may
not have pulled Japan out of its deflationary mindset, but its flexibility was
its hallmark
When he stepped down in 2020, former Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe
was asked what he thought were his legacies. “We were able to end 20 years of
deflation with the three arrows of Abenomics,” Abe replied. Well, ‘Abenomics’,
certainly, is the greatest legacy of Abe, whatever little success it might have
produced.
Japan’s economic troubles date back to the asset price bubble that burst
in the early 1990s. Japan’s malady of prolonged economic stagnation might be
closely related to the country’s traditional ‘deflationary mindset’ by which
companies and households hold off on spending on expectation that low growth
and wages persist for long. In 2015, the Financial Times observed that Japan
“...suffers from an ageing population, persistent deflation, and knotty
structural problems in its labour market and energy supply. Its fiscal position
is awe-inspiringly bad...”
Different prescriptions were suggested since the bubble burst and Paul Krugman’s 1998 paper titled ‘Japan’s Trap’ ( https://web.mit.edu/krugman/www/japtrap.html) deserves special attention. “Japan is an economy that is almost certainly producing well below its productive capacity — that is, the immediate problem facing Japan is one of demand, not supply,” Krugman described Japan’s economic malaise.
The three arrows
He had three main recommendations for the Japanese economy: “structural
reform, fiscal expansion, and unconventional monetary policy.” Following
Krugman’s suggestions, Japan expanded the money supply which, despite a
short-term economic recovery, couldn’t stop the deflation.
In late 2012, Abe became prime minister for the second time. To reignite
the economy after years of subpar growth and falling prices, with the world
still in shock of the Lehman crisis, Abe tried something coherent. He devised a
three-pronged strategy, widely known as the three arrows of Abenomics.
These are: large-scale monetary easing — the introduction of a 2 per
cent inflation target and a programme of quantitative and qualitative easing
(QQE); fiscal spending — large-scale increases in public spending; and
structural reforms — equated to a range of measures including regulatory
reform, corporate governance reform, and the reduction of corporate taxes.
The
Economist explained Abenomics as a “mix of
reflation, government spending, and a growth strategy designed to jolt the
economy out of suspended animation that has gripped it for more than two
decades.” Well, if we look at it carefully, the three arrows of Abenomics might
not be way different from Krugman’s suggestion of 1998.
Within months of its introduction, Abenomics showed some quick
short-term positive effects — wealthier Japanese shoppers were spending more
after a decade-and-a-half of self-imposed austerity, giving retailers a boost.
Some experts even termed it Abenomics’ kimono effect.
In fact, Abenomics saw some long-term successes in employment — Japan’s
unemployment rate, which was at 4.4 per cent in May 2012, came down to 2.6 per
cent in May 2022.
Following the introduction of Abenomics, the Bank of Japan (BOJ) set a 2
per cent inflation target in two years. In 2013, BOJ’s Governor Haruhiko Kuroda
deployed his ‘bazooka’ asset-buying programme to shock the public out of a
deflationary mindset by pledging to double the pace of money printing.
Initially, of course, it helped weaken the yen, giving exporters windfall
profits that trickled down to wages and new jobs. Not by much, though.
After five years of aggressive monetary easing, the inflation rate
remained below 1 per cent and some negative side-effects were also seen. As
inflation kept missing its target, in 2018, the BOJ stopped issuing quarterly
assessments of the expected timeframe for hitting 2 per cent inflation.
Subsequently, after years of shock-and-awe monetary stimulus, BOJ has now
quietly dismantled radical policies introduced by Governor Kuroda.
In fact, when in 2016 Shinzo Abe postponed the planned tax hike, it was
a tacit admission that Abenomics was a colossal failure. Then, Japan’s
potential growth rate slid near-zero just before Covid from around 1 per cent
before Abenomics began, according to BOJ estimates.
Structural reform — the third arrow of Abenomics — has proved elusive,
and is the glaring failure of Abenomics. Deflation in the Japanese economy
proved stubborn. Also, the growth strategy suffered in 2019 from a sales tax
hike and the Sino-American trade war. Then came the once-in-a-century pandemic
that became instrumental to Japan’s biggest-ever economic slump. The Covid also
wiped out some short-term benefits brought by Abenomics, such as an inbound
tourism boom, reflated growth, and rising job availability.
The fourth arrow?
Was there a hidden fourth arrow of Abenomics? In September 2013, Tokyo
won the bid for the 2020 Olympics. “For 15 years, Japan has stagnated because
of deflation and a recessionary trend. I am convinced we can accelerate growth
in the economy if we all work toward the dream and goals we were just granted,”
Abe said in Buenos Aires after the announcement.
And Tokyo 2020 Olympics was widely perceived as the fourth arrow for
Abenomics by experts — Tokyo’s successful Olympic bid was expected to boost
Japan’s economy. The travel industry was expected to attract millions of
tourists to the Games and thereafter, the GDP was expected to enhance by 0.3
per cent, and economic impact of ¥3 trillion ($30 billion) from
Olympics-related investment and spending was calculated, and 150,000 new jobs
were expected to be created.
Some experts predicted an even better effect of the Olympics on the
economy. However, the Covid-eclipsed delayed Olympics didn’t help the tourism
and other Olympics-related stimuli at the expected level.
Importantly, Abe was flexible with his economic reforms. In 2015, he
announced the ‘new three arrows’ of Abenomics, namely a strong economy that
creates hope, support for child-raising that fosters dreams, and social
security that gives citizens a sense of reassurance. It aimed to halt the
decline in Japan’s birthrate and create a society that promotes women’s
involvement in the workforce. Also, a concept known as Society 5.0 was
introduced aimed at further digitalisation of Japan.
Overall, Abenomics surely wasn’t a sufficient push to dismantle the
age-old rigid deflationary mindset of Japanese society. But, still, it was
undoubtedly a valiant attempt and the highlight of Abe’s premiership. During
his resignation from the prime minister’s post in 2020, Abe said: “There has
been talk that Abenomics has been having a harmful impact, so I think the focal
point will be on suggestions on how to make changes to it.”
That’s the enduring legacy of Shinzo Abe and his flexible Abenomics, for
sure.
Source | Business Line | 15 July 2022
Regards!
Librarian
Rizvi Institute of Management
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