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20 April 2012 Enterprising Investor Blog

The Japanese Debt Crisis (Part 2): When Does Japan Cross the Event Horizon?

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As noted in the first part of this series on Japan's looming debt crisis, the economic consequences of Japan’s aging population are just beginning to manifest themselves, and dissaving — the act of spending down your life savings — isn’t the only problem that arises. Social and health care spending also accelerate, often placing greater and greater burdens on the government. For example, social security spending in Japan has leapt from 19.7% of the federal budget to more than 31% in the past decade (between 2000 and 2011), according to Japan's Ministry of Finance. Already, social spending and national debt service costs are causing the federal budget deficit to grow to unwieldy heights and are clearly threatening the cash flow model that has enabled Japan's rates to stay so low.

All of this raises the question: With a funding deficit virtually exploding in Japan right now, can the event horizon for a debt crisis be that far off?

Should the Japanese government move to curb social security benefits, it will only accelerate the need for households to fund more of their own retirement living and health care expenses, exacerbating the dissavings that has already begun among households. Of course, there are some positive changes which offset the negatives to a degree. A shrinking population also reduces the levels of infrastructure investment and capital formation required, so national savings are enhanced. Nevertheless, the inherent pressures of rising social security costs and rising debt and debt-service costs will require the Japanese workforce to work harder simply to maintain the status quo — in which the fiscal deficit is already 11% of GDP, as noted in Figure 1. If Japan's current economic model is left unchanged, the fiscal deficit would skyrocket toward 20% of GDP over the next several years. And remember, there are no free lunches. Any cuts in Japan’s federal budget will have consequences elsewhere.


Figure 1: Japanese Government Revenues vs. Expenditures

Japanese Government Revenues vs. Expenditures

Sources: Ministry of Finance, CFA Institute.


The crown jewel in Japan's virtuous cash flow cycle of the past 22 years is its large foreign currency holdings. Due to the many years of trade surpluses, Japan's corporations maintain vast sums of corporate savings denominated in foreign currencies. These foreign currency holdings generate substantial amounts of investment income each year. However, the control of these vast sums is concentrated in a few hands. Likewise, the bond market (and hence, interest rates) is controlled by many of these same hands. And because bonds are priced in a market, if and when the managers of this capital decide to sell, they can cause a stampede for the exit.

Moreover, what happens to the yen exchange rate if and when this capital is repatriated? Stewards of these foreign currency portfolios sell foreign currencies and buy yen — driving up the value of the yen — and worsening the competitiveness of Japanese exports. Unlike China, which uses its large foreign currency holdings to buy commodities and foreign manufacturers to control strategic assets, Japan is shrinking, so it needs little for growth. While Japan could benefit from the purchase of natural resources and other raw materials which it currently imports, its opportunity set is more limited. The greatest growth industry in Japan right now is perhaps health care, but health care is delivered locally. What strategic value could be gleaned by owning hospitals in say Vietnam or Europe? Consequently, there are limits to the strategic benefits that portfolio allocation could offer Japan.

Already, these corporate investors and banks, in particular, are becoming increasingly concerned about maintaining the status quo. Their ability and willingness are being directly challenged by the escalation of national debt service, the expansion of fiscal deficits, and the ramifications of the Fukushima disaster, as well as the current pressure on the yen exchange rate. Already, Japan’s debt service is 23% of GDP, with interest rates at 1%. What happens if and when rates rise? In short, debt service would explode and crowd out huge portions of the federal budget, as illustrated in Figure 2.


Figure 2: Japanese Debt Service and Rates: What Happens Next?

Japanese Debt Service and Rates

Sources: Ministry of Finance, Bank of Japan, and CFA Institute.


So, what causes rates to rise? Rates rise when the market senses a paradigm shift. Perhaps first is what corporate asset managers decide to do. Second, the general dissaving that is spawned by aging will reduce aggregate demand at a time when aggregate supply is increasing. Third, a stronger yen means fewer exports and, furthermore, the shift in energy policy after the Fukushima disaster means a downward structural shift in the current account balance. Not only does aging impact federal budgets, but it also puts downward pressure on GDP as described in Part 1. Only now, the funding surplus has become a funding deficit and the required monetization of debt is increasingly likely to lead to some inflation (although it is partly offset by the deflationary impacts of a shrinking population).

Now the bond market in Japan is well aware of how the game is played. Of course, the Bank of Japan plays a key role in all of this - in part by buying JGB's when demand is weak, and in part by cajoling these same financial institutions to purchase JGB's. With the tools of regulation at their backs, the BOJ does indeed wield much power. What the bond market is perhaps missing are the ongoing incremental changes that have accumulated over 22 years. Such a consistent message to the market establishes a strong belief among market participants. It's when this belief begins to change that rates will change. So, are beliefs changing? On the margin, banks are showing more reluctance to increasing their exposure to JGB's. And on balance, the funding deficit is becoming a large problem, changing the very economic model that has enabled Japan for so long. These changes will place increasing pressure on the BOJ to keep the status quo alive and somehow prevent the market from realizing the game has changed. Bank of Japan Governor Masaaki Shirakawa truly has the challenge of a lifetime to keep it all together.

Some have argued that Japan can ameliorate its budget shortfall by raising tax rates. In economics, there are no grand solutions, only trade-offs. So, it is a fallacy to think that increasing tax rates necessarily increases tax revenues to the government. Many governments and countries have tried raising tax rates and failed to increase tax revenues either due to tax avoidance or damage to economic growth (or both). Japan is currently considering a number of measures to increase taxes (including a proposal to double the national sales tax, from 5% to 10%), but it is not at all clear that these measures will grow the overall tax revenues to the federal government because of various trade-offs across the global economy. And Japan's funding model is vulnerable to changes in behavior that emanate from changes in tax policy. For instance, what if the rise in tax rates causes capital flight from Japan and the delicate funding deficit accelerates?

Other analysts have compared Japan’s relatively low tax revenue/GDP ratio with that of other countries, claiming that there is ample room to raise taxes. However, this belies the welfare society construct that Japan has developed in the past 75 years. In contrast to the welfare state, the welfare society provides social benefits through private employers. Japan’s welfare society attempts to maintain near-total employment via liberal government loans to private companies, often circumventing the need for unemployment benefits. Also, retirement pensions come largely from personal savings and company compensation rather than as benefits from the state. So, the state has intentionally shifted the cost of its social programs to companies. Should it raise taxes on the private sector, additional pressure would be placed on corporate budgets, thereby weakening the economy.

Compounding matters, Japan's manufacturing prowess is weakening while the country as a whole is becoming less competitive. They have lost leadership positions in a number of key industries and the rise of the yen is making their exports less competitive as well. Moreover, pressured budgets make it more difficult to engage in the long-range R&D spending that had helped the country become a global leader in manufacturing. As an example, once a stalwart in consumer technology, Sony recently announced the layoff of 10,000 workers.

Since the epic global financial meltdown in 2008, the U.S. Federal Reserve has maintained an aggressive policy of depreciating the U.S. dollar. As noted in Figure 3, the yen has appreciated some 30% against its post-bubble average, as well as against the dollar, since the collapse in 2008.


Figure 3: Yen vs. US$

Japan Yen vs US Dollars

Sources: St. Louis Federal Reserve Bank, CFA Institute.


This recent appreciation of the yen is exacerbating all of Japan’s problems — its export products are now 30% more expensive on global markets. Its profile is similar against other major currencies. For the first time since the Japanese bubble collapsed, Japan will now need substantial alternate forms of funding to keep the government afloat. Consider Table 1, which illustrates how the funding sources of the federal government are changing and the pressures these changes will place on the Japanese bond market over the next 10 years.


Table 1: Japan Funding Surplus/Deficit Decade by Decade

Japan: Funding Surplus/Deficit Decade by Decade

The funding deficit over the 2000–10 time frame has been modestly negative and made up for with accommodative policy by the Bank of Japan. This accommodative policy has been offset by deflationary forces in Japan, so the net effect has been mild deflation. Looking forward, if this funding deficit of, say, –5% of GDP were made up for with accommodative monetary policy, then the inflationary force of this accommodative monetary policy would very likely exceed the mild deflation (say, –1% or so) that has been occurring in Japan for some time. The net result would be some mild inflation of, perhaps, 2–4% (depending on how much monetization and how much debt issuance occurs), but it would likely be enough to recalibrate the bond market’s expectations. And if JGB yields rise from 1% to just 2%, Japan’s debt service will explode. Thus, a vicious cycle of higher yields, greater fiscal deficits, greater monetization, and greater inflation will occur.

However, the status quo in Japan — if left unchanged — will see to it that the funding deficit widens materially. As debt continues climbing and GDP continues falling, the growth in the debt-to-GDP ratio accelerates. The combination of a rising yen and stagnating corporations will result in the structural trade surplus deteriorating over time (which is why the BOJ will try to get the yen to decline somewhat). Additionally, debt service and social security spending will continue growing as percentages of the federal budget — all without any increase in interest rates. So there is a widening funding deficit that must be made up for with some combination of debt issuance and/or monetization. The combination of large fiscal deficits, funding shortfalls, and private sector dissaving will ensure that Japan must seek investors on the international markets. Consequently, the (natural) domestic demand base for JGBs is falling, while the government’s need for foreign investors is rising. Although some have suggested that the Bank of Japan could devalue the yen, what would happen to the cost of imports if it did? (Remember that Japan imports virtually all of its raw materials, such as energy and hard commodities.) If it chopped the yen in half and many of its input costs doubled, could its export companies be competitive? What would happen to the balance of trade (all else being equal)?

While the underlying economics will change gradually over time, the crisis will erupt when the bond market breaks from the past. When the market realizes that the status quo has changed, rates will rise and force the government’s fiscal budget to explode, creating a sequence of cascading events. Watch closely to see what the major Japanese banks do with their JGB holdings. In addition, watch pension fund managers. The stewards of capital changing their policy allocations will determine when the status quo shifts.

So, when does Japan breach the event horizon? No one can say for certain, but after 22 years of operating in limbo, the event horizon now appears to coincide with the investment horizon of investors. Perhaps the BOJ will find a devaluation of the yen too irresistible to pass up, a move that will reset Japan’s current course in one fell swoop. Or perhaps the bond market will decide for them. At any rate, one thing is clear: change is coming to Japan.

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All posts are the opinion of the author. As such, they should not be construed as investment advice, nor do the opinions expressed necessarily reflect the views of CFA Institute or the author's employer.

Photo credit: ©iStockphoto.com/Snehitdesign

36 Comments

T
TheArmoTrader (not verified)
20th April 2012 | 11:27am

"So, what causes rates to rise? Rates rise when the market senses a paradigm shift."

Wrong. Rates rise when the Central Bank decides to raise them. The market has little control of rates, especially on the short end of the curve. The BoJ decides what rates will be. The market only has minor influence on the long end. (explained here: http://pragcap.com/i-want-to-come-back-as-the-federal-reserve-you-can-i… )

I read both parts of your post, and your premise is built on flawed understandings of the modern monetary system.
Japan's not going to face a debt crisis, even if debt/gdp gets to 500%. The only "crisis" they can face, as a currency issuer is one of inflation. However, as you said, given the deflationary pressures of a weak economy, that is unlikely to happen.
The only issue going forward with an aging population will be who will create all the goods and services (supply) to meet all the demand. If that does not stay stable or grow, then Japan will be facing inflationary pressures. But given the weak economy (weak demand), this should be of little worry to Japan.

Also, all public debt is private sector savings. Its not "debt" in the sense that you understand debt to be. A sovereign currency issuer's "debt" cannot be compared to a currency users (people, businesses, states, Eurozone nations).

Also, on that "tax/revenue" issue: An issuer of currency can NEVER run out of "money". That is operationally impossible. They can always just issue more. Obviously there is a constraint to this (inflation: More money chasing fewer goods/services), but as I explained above, that is unlikely to get out of hand.

What Japan (and most of the world) needs is aggressive monetary and ESPECIALLY fiscal policy. They need to increase the level of net financial assets so the population can start spending again. This actually will cause some inflationary pressures as the economy grows. And that's what will send rates up, once the BoJ sees inflation rising.

I have to give you credit for laying out a nice detailed argument though. Also, I see you went to my current school (UCLA) for Business school ;)...Go bruins!

H2
hyperinflation 25 (not verified)
21st April 2012 | 3:15pm

Armo,

If you believe that a central bank of any nation is "independent" and raises rates any time they wish then you truly are an ostrich with your head in the sand. Japan will run into severe problems in the near future and the author identified them in a very concise manner. Read it again and throw away your econ text books at UCLA. Have you heard of Kyle Bass?

T
TheArmoTrader (not verified)
22nd April 2012 | 5:45pm

Right. The severe debt crisis is right around the corner! Its on the horizon!

This crap was said in the 90s, 00s, and now is being said in the 2010s. Its probably going to continue into the 2020s.
As long as deflation stays a threat to Japan (very possible given their weak policies), People shorting JGBs are going to get BURNT.

The author's arguments are built a a flawed premise. Japan isn't going to have any debt or inflation crisis at any time soon. If the past 20 years isn't enough proof, then YOUR'E the one being an "ostrich with your head in the sand".

TK
Tres Knippa (not verified)
22nd April 2012 | 12:21pm

Armo Trader,

Let me get this straight. An undergraduate political science major at UCLA can tell the author of this article "your premise is built on flawed understandings of the modern monetary system"?

I suppose this is no surprise coming from someone who would use such flawed logic as to suggest the answer to job growth is an expansion of the public sector employment base. Learn that idea from the fabulous success that is the State of California?

Let me give you a quick lesson that you may have missed in the poly sci department of UCLA.

Increase in GDP= Increase in population+ Increase in productivity.

By all means, please elaborate on how higher taxes, never ending expansion of government, growth of public sector debt, or zero interest rate policy accomplishes any of the changes in the above mentioned equation.

What genius taught you a never ending money supply was a good thing? Did it work in Argentina? Did it work in Germany? How about Zimbabwe?

The Japanese Government Bond market won't ever break? Let me ask you a simple question....who in the world is going to want to own a yen denominated asset once the BOJ prints a never ending supply of money needed to support a faltering bond market?

You want to know the most chilling thing you wrote? "all public debt is private sector savings". This makes me want to vomit. What gives the central government the right to borrow against private sector savings to fund the spending habits of profilgate politicians? Can you imagine the positive change to productivity if those private sector savings were invested rather than lent to the central government. Debt is a headwind to economic growth, plain and simple.

Jot this down somewhere so you don't forget it. Growth comes from the private sector and cannot be engineered from a large central government. Individuals, corporations, municipalities, and federal governments cannot spend more than they take in. Not ever. Not in any case in history. It is not any different this time than the last. There are two pretty famous professors at Harvard and the University of Maryland by the name of Reinhart and Rogoff who you might want to look up.

Tres Knippa
Member, Chicago Mercantile Exchange
Owner, Kenai Capital Management

T
TheArmoTrader (not verified)
22nd April 2012 | 6:56pm

1) "An undergraduate political science major at UCLA can tell the author of this article “your premise is built on flawed understandings of the modern monetary system”?" ~~~~ Umm, ya. Just because I don't have the credentials like a PhD doesn't mean I can't debate econ. I read probably more econ everyday than most econ students.

I LOVE how you keep taking shots at the fact that I am majoring at poli sci at UCLA. Funny stuff.

2) Your'e making SO many assumptions about me/my beliefs in that paragraph. Who say's I want public sector employment expansion to be leading the job recovery? I don't.

Most of the stuff you talk about in that comment are so badly flawed, that I dont know where to begin.

- "Growth of public sector debt" = That just means growth in private sector savings.
If you actually KNEW the formula for GDP you would know that if you line up accounting identities, you would get
(S – I) = (G – T) + (X – M) --This mean Private sector savings = Government deficit + foreign sector balance. That means if the government reduces its deficit, if its not coming from the foreign sector, then its coming from the private sector.

3) "What genius taught you a never ending money supply was a good thing? Did it work in Argentina? Did it work in Germany? How about Zimbabwe?"

If you knew your hyperinflation history and how reserves actually work (banks are never reserve constraint, so the increase in excess reserves are not inflationary at all), you would know why Argentina, Germany and Zimbabwe HAD hyperinflation.
A lot of these cases had to do with Foreign denominated debt. Which means they borrowed in currencies in which they had NO ability to issue. So If the US had big debt denominated in Euros, Yen, Yuan, I WOULD be worried for hyperinflation. But we DONT. Our "debt" is denominated in Dollars.

This is ALL explained here: http://pragcap.com/hyperinflation-its-more-than-just-a-monetary-phenome…

4) Again by definition, private sector net savings = public sector deficit. If you can't understand that, then I can't argue much else because that is a basic fundamental reality.
Also, the Gov does NOT borrow money from the public sector. They just issue it. Nobody "funds" the government besides a bunch of keystrokes managed by the Fed (directed by the Treasury).

How about you jot this down?
Yes, while growth comes from the private sector, that cannot come if the public sector does NOT provide the necessities (Net financial assets, which means deficits) to sustain that growth.
Your assumption that Individuals, corporations, municpalitie and Federal governments are the same are just baseless.
The Fed gov has the ability to issue money, thus it can never run out.
The previous three do not. That is essential to understand, and if you don't see that, there is not point in arguing because we'll just be going around in circles.

You should look up the works of Warren Mosler and the UMKC's econ department.

TK
Tres Knippa (not verified)
22nd April 2012 | 10:02pm

Great news. By all means, please elaborate on how confident you are in your short JGB put position. JGBs are never going down right? Please get short all the JGB puts you like and there will be some of us willing to take the other side of your trade. Isn't the market great? You have an opinion? Jump in, the water is warm.

Best of luck to you and the other Keynesians.

I find your arguments reasonably amusing but somewhat well thought out from a political perspective. If you are ever in Chicago, by all means, please be my guest on the floor of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange. I can promise you that you will never stand in a room with a larger range of education levels and income...............incidentally, in the trading world they are not necessarily correlated.

Best of luck.

WACO

P
Phil (not verified)
23rd April 2012 | 9:15am

@Tres Knippa If you knew your economics, you'd know that TheArmoTrader is espousing a Modern Monetary Theory position, which has a completely different set of theoretical underpinnings than the Keynsian crowd. For a start they treat debt levels as being of great significance to the economy, rather than the neutral triviality that the Keynsians grant it.

Go read the posts at pragcap, you might find them enlightening, even if you disagree with them.

BO
Bill O'Connor (not verified)
24th April 2012 | 1:51pm

really ? can you show me where Ireland-Portugal-Greece-Italy-Spain central banks decided to raise their rates ?

J
Jeff (not verified)
24th September 2012 | 5:14pm

Great post!

RR
Ron Rimkus, CFA (not verified)
20th April 2012 | 1:40pm

Mr. ArmoTrader,

Perhaps you overstate your case. Newton's third law states that for every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. In economics, we call them trade-offs. Just because central banks have "controlled" interest rates historically, does not mean that they will control them in the future. Moreover, it also does not mean that central banks have not caused distortions or problems in the past. In fact, they have - big time. The only question for us to resolve is "What are the trade-offs?"

I am more interested in the trade-offs or consequences of their actions, rather than succumb to a mistaken belief in their supreme power. Markets are and always will be the final arbiter of events, so there will be market and/or economic events that central planners can not control, no matter how hard they try.

To understand this, consider the composition of just how low rates have been "engineered" globally in the past 20 years or so: trade imbalances, fiscal deficit spending, total debt growth and central bank intervention. Central banks directly control only 1 of these 4 activities (setting of discount rates and/or intervention into bond markets) and directly influence credit creation with rates (low rates is partly why the world is grossly over-indebted right now). However, fiscal deficit spending and trade imbalances are largely outside their control and these factors have been significant as well.

For instance, persistent trade imbalances (e.g. Japan's trade surplus and the US trade deficit) have enabled the surplus countries to buy the sovereign bonds of their trading partners, while deficit countries ramp up total debt levels to enhance aggregate demand (due both to incremental demand from low rates as well as fiscal deficit spending). These are not small potatoes - the US trade deficit alone has generated about $5 trillion of foreign owned capital over the past 20 years - much of which ended up in sovereign US Treasuries - bidding up bond prices and down yields. Do you think that this game can go on forever?

The "free" exchange rate mechanism is supposed to enable trade imbalances to rectify themselves due to the movement of exchange rates. Central bank/government behavior blocks the free trade of currencies, so balance in trade can not happen. So, what are the trade-offs? Where does it manifest itself? Short answer: Debt. Even your favored theory of MMT proposes that countries should print-as-they-go due to the printing press. Had governments never issued a dime in debt, the only difference today is that prices would be a lot higher. However, they all have debt which absorbs the inflationary power of excess spending and printed money over time. But like a levee in a flood, at some point the tidewater is much too great. And in the case of Japan, it all flows through their federal budget in circular fashion. So, whether it is a debt crisis, a currency devaluation or an inflation crisis, it's all a difference without distinction.