Title: Chinese Economic Growth: Perspectives from the Japanese Manga
1Chinese Economic Growth Perspectives from the
Japanese Manga
- Robert Dekle
- FRB-NY and USC
2U.S. Optimism about China
- Authors such as Fishman (2005) and the popular
business press in the U.S. are very optimistic
about Chinese economic growth--eg. China will
surpass Japan in aggregate GDP in a decade or so,
and will surpass the U.S. in 50 years.
3Japanese Pessimism about China
- In Japan, the business and especially magazines
read by some intellectuals such as Bungei Shunju,
Shokun etc., are much more pessimistic about
Chinese growth. - This pessimistic attitude is reflected in the
latest Manga Nihon Keizai.
4Japanese Manga
- Japanese Manga--or comic strip--cannot simply be
dismissed as Kids Stuff. - The Manga have served a useful pedagogical
role--securities firms used them to teach people
about stock investing political parties about
policies.
5- The Manga Nihon Keizai or Manga Japanese Economy
series fits into the role of the pedagogical
comic strip. - They are published about once a decade the first
in the mid-1980s.
6- The first Manga Japanese Economy covers some key
issues of the 1980s U.S.-Japan trade conflicts,
Yen appreciation, government debt. - The second Manga Japanese Economy, issued in the
late 1990s covers banking sector distress,
corruption of government officials.
7- The last Manga Nihon Keizai issued last year
covered Japans Aging problem, the impact of
emerging technologies such as virtual reality. - Over 2/3 of the latest volume, however, deals
with the emergence of the Chinese economy.
8Japans Recent Economic History from the
Perspective of Manga
- However, before we look at the Japanese
perspective on recent Chinese economic growth,
let us take a quick tour through some key moments
in recent Japanese economic history, through the
eyes of the Japanese manga.
9The mid-1980s U.S.-Japan Trade Conflict
- The following strip depicts Detroit automobile
workers in the early 1980s, reacting to the surge
of Japanese cars. - As many of you know, U.S.-Japan trade conflict
was a major political issue in both countries in
the 1980s.
10 11U.S.-Japan Trade Conflict in the 1980s
12- As a response to this trade conflict, to quiet
American critics, Japanese companies started to
carry out foreign direct investment in the United
States. - This led to problems in Japanese subcontractors
who supply to these companies those who followed
their customers to the U.S. came out fine.
13Japanese FDI in the U.S. in the 1980s
14- Another result of the high U.S. trade deficits
was the sharp appreciation of the yen vis-à-vis
the dollar in the mid-1980s. - This appreciation caused severe disruption in
many Japanese heavy manufacturers, especially in
steel and shipbuilding.
15Rise of the Yen and Japans Deindustrialization
16- To combat the deflationary effects of the yen
appreciation, the Japanese government
contemplated expansionary measures for the
economy. - To some Japanese, expansionary policies raise
recurrent memories of Takahashi Korekiyo, who was
assassinated by military officials.
17- In the early 1930s, Minister of Finance Takahashi
embarked on expansionary fiscal policies to
expand the economy. - However, as he tried to tighten in the late
1930s, he was assassinated by military officials,
who needed ultra-loose fiscal policies for the
military expansion in Asia.
182-26 Incident the Assassination of Takahashi
Korekiyo by the Japanese Military
19- Thus, expansionary government policies are viewed
with great suspicion by some Japanese, especially
the Manga writer, Ishinomori Shotaro. - In the following scene, the Manga depicts the
Japanese monetary expansion of the mid-1980s as a
result of a vast U.S.-Japan conspiracy.
20The Snowballing and Monetization of Debt
21Gaiatsu to Increase Domestic Demand
22The Cause of the late-80s Bubble Economy?
23- Some Japanese economists view the ultraloose
monetary policy of the mid- to late-1980s as the
cause of Japans asset market bubble in land and
equity prices. - This bubble collapsed in the early 1990s,
leading to severe banking sector distress, and
the lost decade and a half up until recently.
24The Collapse of the Financial System in the 1990s
25- The second Manga Japanese Economy was published
in the late 1990s. - It deals mostly with the 1990s banking sector
problemsthe lax supervision of the Ministry of
Finance of banks, the difficulty of banks in
resolving real estate loans to the Yakuza.
26- Particularly interesting (to me) was the detail
regarding the merger of two fictitious Japanese
banks. - It was obvious that the two fictitious banks
referred to Bank of Tokyo and Mitsubishi Bank.
27- It tells how a special think tank or research
institute had to be set up, to situate a former
high ranking MOF official who was now CEO of the
one of the merging banks. - Of course, we know that the CEO was Tomoo Gyoten
of Bank of Tokyo, who left the BOT-Mitsubishi to
head up IIMA.
28- By 2004, Japan has shown tentative signs of
emerging from its long recession. - The third Manga Japanese economy published in
2005 is forward-looking. It addresses three
challenges that that Japanese economy must
confront.
29- The first challenge is the aging population and
the consequent sharp decline in the labor force.
30Population Aging A Major Problem
31- The young protagonist, a laid off former banker,
who is now a consultant, is charged with
revitalizing a dying Tokyo suburb. - This suburb, a former so-called New Town like
Machida, is aging rapidly.
32(No Transcript)
33- This consultant is retained by the local
government of the suburb to come up with a plan
to help occupy the elderly. - The consultant finds two things. That the
Japanese elderly are quite healthy and able to
work, and that many Japanese women want and need
to work, so that someone needs to take care of
children.
34- Thus, the consultant proposes to the suburb, the
construction of a day care center staffed by
the local elderly.
35(No Transcript)
36- The Manga suggests that alleviating the Japanese
demographic problem requires creative,
entrepreneurial thinking. - In fact, a theme of the latest Manga is that
although there is now an economic recovery, - Japan, as a mature economy, will never return
to the heady days of rapid growth.
37- Innovative, risk-taking thinking is required for
individual Japanese and the Japanese economy to
survive.
38- The political leaning of the Manga Japanese
Economy series is probably close to that of
mainstream Japanese economists and businessmen. - In fact, the first Manga Japanese Economy was
published by the Nikkei, the Japanese Wall Street
Journal.
39- There are alternative views, however, about the
Japanese economys direction. - A more leftist, but no less mainstream view, is
quite suspicious of entrepreneurialism, and - Japans movement towards a more, U.S.-style
market-oriented or neo-liberal economy.
40- The following strip, taken from Sapio Magazine,
argues that Horie, the entrepreneur who ran
Livedoor and was arrested for accounting fraud,
was a product of Japans structural reform and
economic liberalization.
41An Anti-NeoliberalismUS Style Capitalism View
42Horie of Livedoor was Only a Successful
Practitioner of Japans Neo-liberal System
43Horie Did Not Break the Rules He was Only the
First to Practice this New Style of Capitalism
44Despite Hories Arrest
45There are Still Roppongi Hills Zoku Carrying
out Hories Ways Exacerbating Japanese Income
Inequality
46- Now back to Manga Japanese Economy.
- The second challenge is the effective use of
innovative technologies. - The Manga strip shows the protagonist trying out
the latest in virtual reality technology.
47New Technology Virtual Reality
48- In this segment, the virtual reality system spins
out a future scenario of crucial importance to
Japan. - That concerning Japans third and largest
challengethe Chinese bubble economy.
49The Flow of Money Into China Can be Very Dangerous
50- As globalization spreads, corporations from
around the worldespecially the Japanese--are
rushing to invest in China. - A major theme of the latest Manga is that this
investment rush may be very dangerous to Japanese
and international investors.
51Money Flowing Into China A Bubble?
52- Why? The Japanese popular (Manga and other books
and magazines) argument. - Real estate prices in Chinese cities are a
bubble phenomenon. - Shanghai apartments are 200 times the average
wage of the Shanghai worker, and these prices
increase at 20-30 percent per year.
53Very Expensive Real Estate in Shanghai
54China is not Japan in the 1980s China is at its
Peak!
55- There is also a massive non-performing loan
problem in Japan, estimated to be about 50
percent of Chinese GDP or more. - Major banks in China are publicly owned, and
loans are made on communist party membership or
other non-economic criteria.
56- The collapse of the real estate bubble can lead
to impaired bank balance sheets as in Japan.
57As Firms fail Problem Loans Worsen
58- The Manga advises that Japanese investors be very
cautious in China. Why? - The U.S. authorities will put pressure on the
Chinese to let the yuan float, given Chinas
trade surpluses reminiscent of Japans in the
early 1980s.
59As with Japanese Exports in the 1980s Protests
in U.S.
60The More Things ChangeThe More they Remain the
Same U.S.-Japan Trade Conflict in the 1980s
61If the RMB floats like the Japanese Yen
62- The Manga says there will be a calamity when the
yuan starts floating against the dollar. - First, the yuan will appreciate, hurting Chinese
exporters and the economy. - The slowing economy will burst the real estate
bubble and expose weaknesses in Chinese banking.
63- Perceived risks of investing in China will
heighten, leading to a sudden stop of capital
inflows, and a rapid outflow of domestic funds
offshore. - This funds outflow will put pressure on the yuan
to collapse. A classic currency crisis, as it
happened in 1990s Asia.
64- The 1 trillion in FX reserves will not help,
since much of Chinese FX reserves are offset by
foreign liabilities, in the form of foreign loans
and investments in yuan. - Foreigners will convert their yuan holdings into
dollars and yen, quickly depleting Chinese
reserves.
65FX Reserves in China, Mostly Short-term
66An Assessment
- Which is right, the optimistic U.S. view or the
pessimistic Japanese view.
67- Japanese knowledgeable about China, but view
colored by own recent past of U.S.-Japan - trade relations, currency appreciation,
excess liquidity (money), and asset market
bubbles.
68- Although U.S. view too optimistic, probably no
currency crash in China. - Chinese asset (real estate) prices closer to
fundamentals. 35 largest Chinese cities, land
prices increasing at 10-11 percent per year.
69- China should be compared to Japan in the 1960s,
when rapid economic growth and population inflows
increases Japanese land prices in key cities such
as Tokyo and Osaka by over 20 percent. Unlike
1980s, such increases were sustainable. - China is at its peak.
70- Chinese Foreign Reserves accumulation until
end-2004, a large part were foreign portfolio
inflows. (That is, about 600 billion dollars in
end-2004). - However, the 400 billion dollar accumulation
since end-2004, Chinas large overall current
account surpluses in the last two years.
71- Most Pessimistic view of Chinese NPLs (1
trillion U.S. dollars). Chinese FX reserves can
easily cover perhaps 50-80 percent or more of
this outstanding NPLs.
72- Also, as China grows at 10 percent, and FX
reserves accumulate, can grow out of NPL
problem. - But who knows. Better to be cautious, since China
is now Japans largest trade and FDI partner.
73Very Preliminary Projections
74Chinese Technological Catch-Up with Japan and
other countries, Driving Growth
75Pace of Privatization Does not Matter
76Projections of Chinese Labor Productivity and GDP
Growth