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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 | 2:28pm

Sorry but I'm going to have to disagree. Central banks, as the monopoly issuer of reserves, control rates. Its easy to see this if you just look at the overlay of the FFR, 1 year rate, and 10 year rate.
http://research.stlouisfed.org/fredgraph.png?g=6AK
As you see, the short end of the curve is basically the FFR. The 10 year, although not as correlated, still follows the trend. And as long as the US continues being the monopoly issuer of reserves/dollar (meaning no gold standard, no "Eurozone" monetary union in North America,etc), the Central bank WILL continue to control rates. Not the market. Your assumption is based on thinking from the "gold standard era" where markets did control rates, similarly to what is happening in Spain/Italy/Greece - a TRUE debt crisis (even with the ECB is taking steps, which just postpones the crisis, not solves it).
You have NO choice but to believe in their "supreme" power because the realism of the modern monetary system hold true- that the CB controls rates because they control reserves because they are the monopoly issuer of the currency.

Also, your understanding of deficits/debt is erroneous. All debt/deficit is, is private sector savings. Its an accounting identity. If you take the public debt that HAS to equal total net private sector savings (there's also the foreign sector, but to keep it simple here will not go into that).

Public debt is NOT like private debt. To understand why Japan has been buying bonds, think of it like this.
They sell us Item X. They receive US dollars, which are credited to their "reserve accounts" (basically a checking account) at the Fed. Japan can either Buy US products with these Dollars OR 'save' them. If Japan decides to save them, a rational actor will decide to save them in the best way in which they can earn interest. So they decide to buy US bonds (aka public debt). So what the Fed does is transfer the dollars from their 'checking account' to their 'savings account' (where they earn higher interest). Same goes for Japan.
The fiscal deficit (spending=printing) of a country borrowing in their OWN currency is nothing but an accounting process & monetary operation, in which they offer the private (and foreign) sector higher yields in which to SAVE in.
So if one sector is Net saving (a surplus), one sector MUST be in a deficit. Given Japan's situation in which the private sector is net savers (and usually, this SHOULD be the way you want things, unless a foreign sector surplus can cover that deficit ran by the private sector), the public sector is in a deficit.
This chart shows the balances of the 3 sectors of the economy in Japan. http://bilbo.economicoutlook.net/blog/wp-content/uploads/2011/03/Japan_… Note that this has to equal to Zero.

The matter of fact is, Japan does not borrow in dollars (or the US does not borrow in Yen). They "borrow" in their own currency, so a debt crisis is operationally impossible (unless caused politically, like lets say, restrictions on spending based on an arbitrary number, aka the debt ceiling).
The only "crisis" Japan can face is one with deflation (depression) or inflation. Only in the latter scenario would Japan need to do any "austere" reforms (aka cut spending/raise taxes, in order to lower Aggregate demand and in turn inflation). But given the weak domestic demand and deflation resulting from it, this is the LEAST of Japan's worries (and the US).

As for the “What are the trade-offs?” question regarding central banks controlling rates. The trade off is that the private sector gets low rates. Now, as you said, there can be negatives that come with this (in a booming economy, this could HELP lead to bubbles- which create excessive private debt which hurts the recovery like it is right now in the US-, but not necessarily). There are also positives with low interest rates in a weak economy, in which refinancing/borrowing gets cheaper thus leading to a faster recovery (however, since we are in a rare care of the balance sheet recession, this has not helped much in this recovery, but thats another debate).

But to just conclude, CBs control rates, as evidenced by Japan over the past 20 years! Not to sound offensive, but people have made the SAME argument on Japan for 2 decades now (and you even mention this). They will make the same arguments for the US too, where a "fiscal debt crisis" is right around the corner (despite ALL the evidence/fundamentals saying there isn't).

Thanks

DG
Damien Golding (not verified)
21st July 2013 | 3:43am

Despite all the logic reasoning behind Japan going under I do agree in ways that Japan is definitely a lot safer than initial figures seem to show.

News always compares Japan with other nations with similar levels of debt compared with GDP such as those in Europe, but does not take into account the huge differences in society.

Japanese debt is primarily controlled within Japan.
Japanese society works very hard with high employment rates doing real jobs, not the jobs that are created by governments for statistical reasons.
The Japanese public generally do not invest outside of Japan regardless of interest rate changes.

I believe these points above have a huge impact on how Japan is much safer against future debt issues.
Just think about how Japan is compared to Greece in GDP to debt but the fact is employment in Greece is extremely low compared to booming trade in Japan despite what figures say I can tell you as a resident in Japan that compared to places like England, jobs are very abundant.

My main worries in future issues of debt are that it is not under control and that the shrinking population puts a burden in pension, real estate companies and debt per person, but I also believe even the worst will not be anyway near as bad as countries in Europe, especially because debt is generally controlled within Japan meaning the worst is that investors in Japan lose their saving/investments and they have to start earning all over again.

J
Jim (not verified)
20th April 2012 | 7:17pm

Did you just quote a physics law when it comes to what is essentially monopoly money?

This article could have been written in 1995, or 1998, or 2000, or 2002, or 2004, or 2006.

I always ask one question whenever I read these "debt crisis" articles about Japan, US, UK etc.

How is it possible for a country to ever go bankrupt or face any crisis when it "owes" money in the same currency it alone has the power to issue? Japan, US, UK, etc can always "service" the debt no matter how high it gets. There is a theoretical limit to this when runaway inflation can take hold but none of these countries are even close to that point. Japan is going thru a deflationary period. The US/UK are FAR from operating at full capacity.

Yes, and it will go on forever. We benefit from this trade imbalance since we get tangible goods for paper money. The foreign nations sit on sterile cash they want a return on so they demand treasuries. This is why the "debt" is so high. The tradeoff is that by wanting cheaper items produced abroad we've killed our own manufacturing base since we cannot compete on a price basis.

If the markets controlled everything, why is Japan's borrowing rate so low relative to it's debt levels? Why are people tripping over themselves to lap up US and Japan debt? If the event horizon was looming, wouldn't the market be pricing that in? Especially since the doomsday predictions have been going on for 2 decades now?

At some point, empirical evidence has to trump theory and predictions.

C
Chris (not verified)
22nd April 2012 | 12:53am

Ron

Thank you very much for a very detailed well thought set of arguments. I thoroughly enjoyed reading it.

You have succinctly argued as I would that unsustainable fundamentals do not sustain themselves. The MMT mumbo jumbo and assorted Keynesian ivory tower theories work....until they don't. The key lies only in timing but not in structure.

Chris

M
Mark (not verified)
22nd April 2012 | 11:47pm

One thing that I didn't see mentioned that is important is the real estate bubble that led to the deflation. Part of the reason that the government has been able to issue so much debt is that homeowners (and real estate investors) have been paying down the mortgages on their underwater properties. As property prices continue to drop, many properties stay underwater or nearly so. Mortgage debt has been shrinking as government debt has been expanding. When the real estate market bottoms out, it will become more difficult to grow the government debt. However, with an aging and shrinking population demand for real estate will remain low and will fall below replacement cost. The Fukushima disaster has put further downward pressure on real estate prices, at least regionally.

J
Jussi (not verified)
23rd April 2012 | 3:30am

I think it is quite clear that CB will keep the rates down and able to do if necessary.

There will be no hyperinflation without higher demand. Why would anyone raise the prices without enough demand? Japan needs if anything more demand and less horror stories. Kill the zombies.

G
genauer (not verified)
23rd April 2012 | 6:09am

All these people, who think that governments can print money forever,
and ask for evidence to the contrary are like people who jump from the 93rd floor and at 17th floor proudly declare: so far this has worked beautifully.

Why are Greece, Ireland, Portugal under IMF / ECB supervision?

Why is Argentine again resorting to capital controls and plain stealing (YPF), private pensions, oil companies, etc, if they could print all the money they need ? Preparing for the second criminal default in the near future, which will hit a lot harder than the last in 2002.

J
Jim (not verified)
23rd April 2012 | 11:26am

Why are Greece, Ireland, Portugal under IMF / ECB supervision?

Do you have any clue what the difference is between the monetary systems of those countries and Japan, US, UK etc?

Here's a clue: what makes the US states different from the federal government?

If you don't you just came to a gun fight with a plastic spoon. Go educate yourself a bit.

RR
Ron Rimkus, CFA (not verified)
23rd April 2012 | 3:30pm

ArmoTrader and Jim, thank you both for keeping us on our toes. You both bring up interesting insights. It seems there are a few prominent points of contention: 1) what is the real relationship between private sector growth and government spending 2) are central banks more powerful than markets? ... and 3) is now any different than '95, '00, '05, '10... . I will try to address each of them here, though I will keep it brief as possible as these really are larger topics unto themselves.

Regarding item #1, the equation you laid out so elegantly in your response (Armo) does not capture the entirety of the problem. For starters, the underlying unit is currency (e.g. yen, dollars, etc.) which itself changes. Second, government spending often has a negative multiplier (meaning that 1$ in deficit spending leads to less than 1$ of GDP growth). It's growth, just unproductive growth. Third, there is a fundamental relationship between private sector spending and government spending. The only question is one of capital allocation. Would each dollar be better spent by the government or by the private sector? Government projects that are better spent by the government should get funded (through taxes) and those that are not productive should not. I am working on a broader piece that looks at aggregate change in GDP over a period of time vs. aggregate change in total debt. (if anyone has seen this sort of data, please let me know). Lastly, your equation focuses on the income statement of a country and does not say anything about its balance sheet/financial condition. Needless to say, these features are important as well.

Regarding item #2, are CB's more powerful than markets? True they stand at the end of the bull whip. Agreed. However, there have been many factors at work over the past 30 years to bring rates down, many outside the control of CB's in general and Bank of Japan in particular. Correlation is indeed different than causation. There are many market events historically where correlations were in place for many years consecutively and then it changed. (e.g. the relationship between natural gas prices and oil were in sync for about 20 years and then the markets changed., or how about Amaranth Advisors that put on a complex calendar spread that worked for 15 years until it didn't.)

A big reason for lowering rates globally is the ongoing trade deficits. Trade deficits (as Armo described) lead to purchase of govt bonds in deficit countries. These have been large numbers. Persistent trade deficits and surplus can't go on forever - even if they can go on for a long time. Surplus countries like Japan have used their CB to lower rates, stimulate debt and regulate banks into buying more JGB's. Lastly, debt is aggregated, while GDP is shrinking. If deflation continues more and more of the burden of the growing debt load must be born by fewer and fewer tax payers. This is different from the past 20 years as declines in the population as a whole have just begun. If BOJ is successful in targeting inflation, it resets the expectations of the markets and forces the fiscal deficit to explode.

REgarding item #3, why now? Japan's is also changing structurally because they are becoming less competitive (mfg moving to other parts of Asia), the aging and dissaving mentioned and due to Fukushima - they are now importing much more energy. So, the closed loop funding process I described - which was in place for most of the past 22 years - is coming to an end. They will increasingly need to look outside Japan for funding and/or print more. In fact, the BOJ itself has announced it now wants to break the back of deflation and is targeting 1% inflation. This alone should push yields up on JGB's, which then flows through the fiscal budget/deficit etc. Markets are in part coerced by BOJ regulation into buying JGB's, but they will still be forced to respond to fundamental changes.

In the final analysis I think you both have something to add to the discussion, so I am grateful. In particular I liked your links to other posts providing some clarification of your thinking. To sum it up, I think that war or foreign denominated debt are not the only ways to have a crisis. Thanks again.