September 16, 2013
Tokyo, Japan
Suicide has long
played a bizarre role in Japanese culture.
In feudal Japan, for
example, dishonored samurai would often commit seppuku, a suicide ritual
that involved ceremonial disembowelment. It was torturous pain lasting
for hours.
In World War II, the
Japanese military churned out suicide attackers known as the kamikaze
that routinely antagonized allied warships in the Pacific.
And of course,
citizens in Hiroshima and Nagasaki simply went back into their homes and
waited to become burnt toast despite ample warnings from the US military.
Even after the
Fukishima disaster, TEPCO employees went rushing back into deadly levels
of radiation exposure in what could only be characterized as a suicide
mission.
Despite the obvious
prospect of certain death, the Japanese collective still did what was
expected of them by the state. Even if it meant roasting alive under a
mushroom cloud.
This fierce
commitment to the nation has often been abused by the Japanese government
which disposed of its people like kindling. It's the same today.
Looking purely at the
numbers, Japan's medium-term fundamentals are among the bleakest in the
world.
Total government debt
amounts to over 200% of the country's entire GDP-- a figure so large that
the Japanese government spends 51.5% of the 43 trillion yen ($430
billion) they collect in tax revenue just to pay interest!
Perhaps even more
astounding is that 'primary balance expenses,' i.e. normal government
expenditures, totaled 70.3 trillion yen, or 163% of tax revenue.
The only way they've
managed to stay afloat is by issuing more debt, which makes the problem
even worse. In fact, 46% of the 2013 budget is being financed by debt.
These guys are
running out of rope. And fast.
The government is
trying to 'fix' this by appealing to Japanese people's sense of national
pride to get them to buy more government bonds.
Needless to say, this
is like a modern-day economic kamikaze-- letting the people commit
financial suicide for the good of the state.
And perhaps decades
ago, this tactic may have worked. But not today. Times are changing, and
people aren't willing to lay down like they used to. Here's an
interesting example--
Japan is a baseball
obsessed nation. They love the game. And their equivalent of Babe Ruth is
a player named Sadaharu Oh who retired in 1980.
Oh is a national hero
for hitting 55 home runs in a single season, a record which stood for
decades.
This season, a
foreign player named Wladimir Balentien started challenging Oh's record.
And as he got close, many Japanese pitchers in the Nippon league refused
to even throw to him in an effort to preserve Oh's record and mystique.
But then something
changed. There was a shift in mentality, and suddenly all the players
started giving Balentien a fair shot at the record. They quit putting
national pride first, and just played the game.
Balentien broke the
record yesterday and is now, officially, the Home Run King of Japan.
This may seem like a
minor footnote. But in Japan, it's a major shift... suggesting that
Japanese people are no longer willing to lay down for the sake of the
national pride, let alone the government.
You can see this
shift in the bond market; individuals and pension funds alike are
reducing their purchases of Japanese government bonds... which begs the
question:
If the government is
financing 46% of its budget with debt, but fewer and fewer people are
willing to buy this debt, then how will they be able to keep the party
going?
They won't. It's
simple arithmetic. The only ways out for them are default and a currency
crisis-- the biggest in history. This would affect financial markets,
banks, and the entire global financial system in a profound way.
Given the magnitude
of this impact, and as close as they are to the end, this is simply not a
trend that anyone can afford to ignore.
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2 comments:
If we could just teach the ancient ritual of seppuku for dishonorable behavior to our Senators and Congressmen - oh yeah, I forgot, they HAVE no honor...
[Never mind]
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