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	  The Myth That Japan Is Broke: 
	
	 
	
	 Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, September 8, 2012 
 
	
	Japan’s massive government debt conceals massive benefits for the Japanese 
	people, with lessons for the U.S. debt “crisis.” 
	
	In an April 2012 article in Forbes titled “If 
	Japan Is Broke, How Is It Bailing Out Europe?”, Eamonn Fingleton pointed 
	out 
	the Japanese government was by far the largest single non-eurozone 
	contributor to the latest Euro rescue effort. 
	This, he said, is “the same government that has been going round 
	pretending to be bankrupt (or at least offering no serious rebuttal when 
	benighted American and British commentators portray Japanese public finances 
	as a trainwreck).”  Noting that 
	it was also Japan that rescued the IMF system virtually single-handedly at 
	the height of the global panic in 2009, Fingleton asked: How can a nation whose government is supposedly the most 
	overborrowed in the advanced world afford such generosity? . . . The betting is that Japan’s true public finances are far 
	stronger than the Western press has been led to believe. What is undeniable 
	is that the Japanese Ministry of Finance is one of the most opaque in the 
	world . . . .  Fingleton acknowledged that the Japanese government’s 
	liabilities are large, but said we also need to look at the asset side of 
	the balance sheet: [T]he Tokyo Finance Ministry is increasingly borrowing 
	from the Japanese public not to finance out-of-control government spending 
	at home but rather abroad. Besides stepping up to the plate to keep the IMF 
	in business, Tokyo has long been the lender of last resort to both the 
	U.S. and British governments. Meanwhile it borrows 10-year money at an 
	interest rate of just 1.0 percent, the second lowest rate of any borrower in 
	the world after the government of Switzerland. It’s a good deal for the Japanese 
	government: it can borrow 10-year money at 1 percent and lend it to the U.S. 
	at 1.6 percent (the going rate on 
	
	U.S. 10-year bonds), 
	making a tidy spread. 
	 
	
	Japan’s debt-to-GDP ratio is nearly 230%, 
	the worst of any major country in the world. 
	Yet 
	Japan 
	remains the world’s largest 
	creditor country, 
	with net foreign assets of $3.19 trillion. 
	
	
	In 2010, its GDP per capita 
	was more than that of France, Germany, the U.K. and Italy. 
	And while China’s economy is now larger than 
	Japan’s because of its burgeoning population (1.3 billion versus 128 
	million), China’s $5,414 GDP per capita is only 12 percent of Japan’s 
	$45,920.  How to explain these 
	anomalies? 
	
	
	Fully 95 percent of Japan’s national debt 
	is held domestically by the Japanese themselves. 
	 Over 20% of the debt is 
	held by Japan Post Bank, the Bank of Japan, and other government entities. 
	Japan Post is the 
	largest holder of domestic savings in the world, and it returns interest to 
	its Japanese customers. 
	Although theoretically privatized in 2007, it 
	has been a political football, and 100% of its stock is still owned by the 
	government. 
	The Bank of Japan is 55% government-owned and 
	100% government-controlled. 
	   Of the remaining debt, over 
	60% is held by 
	
	Japanese banks, insurance companies and pension funds. 
	Another chunk is held by individual Japanese savers. 
	Only 5% is held by 
	foreigners, mostly central banks. 
	As noted in a September 2011
	
	article in The New York Times:  
	
	The Japanese government is in deep debt, but the rest of Japan has ample 
	money to spare. The Japanese government’s debt
	is 
	the people’s money. 
	They own each other, and they collectively 
	reap the benefits. 
	 
	Myths of the Japanese Debt-to-GDP Ratio Japan’s debt-to-GDP ratio looks 
	bad.  
	But 
	
	as economist Hazel Henderson notes, 
	this is just a matter of accounting practice—a practice that she and other 
	experts contend is misleading. 
	
	Japan leads globally in most areas of 
	high-tech manufacturing, including aerospace. 
	The debt on the other side of its balance 
	sheet represents the payoffs from all this productivity to the Japanese 
	people.     
	
	According to Gary Shilling, 
	writing on 
	Bloomberg in June 
	2012, more than half of Japanese public spending goes for debt service and 
	social security payments. 
	 Debt 
	service is paid as interest to Japanese “savers.” 
	Social security and interest on the national 
	debt are not included in GDP, but these are actually the social safety net 
	and public dividends of a highly productive economy. 
	These, more than the military weapons and 
	“financial products” that compose a major portion of U.S. GDP, are the real 
	fruits of a nation’s industry. 
	For Japan, they represent the enjoyment by the 
	people of the enormous output of their high-tech industrial base. 
	 Shilling writes: Government 
	deficits are supposed to stimulate the economy, yet the composition of 
	Japanese public spending isn’t particularly helpful. Debt service and 
	social-security payments -- generally non-stimulative -- are expected to 
	consume 53.5 percent of total outlays for 2012 . . . .  So says conventional theory, but 
	social security and interest paid to domestic savers actually do stimulate 
	the economy. 
	They do it by getting money into the pockets 
	of the people, increasing “demand.” 
	Consumers with money to spend then fill the 
	shopping malls, increasing orders for more products, driving up 
	manufacturing and employment. 
	 
	Myths About Quantitative Easing Some of the money for these 
	government expenditures has come directly from “money printing” by the 
	central bank, also known as “quantitative easing.” 
	For over a decade, the Bank of Japan has been 
	engaged in this practice; yet the hyperinflation that deficit hawks said it 
	would trigger has not occurred. 
	To the contrary, as noted by 
	
	Wolf Richter in a May 9, 2012 article: [T]he Japanese [are] in fact among the few people in the 
	world enjoying actual price stability, with interchanging periods of minor 
	inflation and minor deflation—as opposed to the 27% inflation per decade 
	that the Fed has conjured up and continues to call, moronically, “price 
	stability.” He cites as evidence the following graph from the 
	Japanese Ministry of Internal Affairs: 
	 How 
	is that possible? 
	It all depends on where the money generated by 
	quantitative easing ends up. 
	In Japan, the money borrowed by the government 
	has found its way back into the pockets of the Japanese people in the form 
	of social security and interest on their savings. 
	Money in consumer bank accounts stimulates 
	demand, stimulating the production of goods and services, increasing supply; 
	and when supply and demand rise together, prices remain stable. 
	Myths About 
	the “Lost Decade” 
	Japan’s finances have long been shrouded in secrecy, perhaps because when 
	the country was more open about printing money and using it to support its 
	industries, it got 
	
	embroiled in World War II. 
	In his 
	2008 book 
	In the Jaws of the Dragon, 
	Fingleton suggests that Japan feigned insolvency in the “lost decade” of the 
	1990s to avoid drawing the ire of protectionist Americans for its booming 
	export trade in automobiles and other products. 
	Belying the weak reported statistics, Japanese 
	exports increased by 73% during that decade, foreign assets increased, and 
	electricity use increased by 30%, a tell-tale indicator of a flourishing 
	industrial sector. 
	By 2006, Japan’s exports were three times what 
	they were in 1989. 
	 The 
	Japanese government has maintained the façade of complying with 
	international banking regulations by “borrowing” money rather than 
	“printing” it outright. 
	But borrowing money issued by the government’s 
	own central bank is the functional equivalent of the government printing it, 
	particularly when the debt is just carried on the books and never paid back. 
	Implications 
	for the “Fiscal Cliff” All 
	of this has implications for Americans concerned with an out-of-control 
	national debt. 
	Properly managed and directed, it seems, the 
	debt need be nothing to fear. 
	Like Japan, and unlike Greece and other 
	Eurozone countries, the U.S. is the sovereign issuer of its own currency. 
	If it wished, Congress could fund its budget 
	without resorting to foreign creditors or private banks. 
	It could do this either by issuing the money 
	directly or by borrowing from its own central bank, effectively 
	interest-free, since the Fed rebates its profits to the government after 
	deducting its costs. 
	 
	
	A little quantitative easing can be a good thing, if the money winds up with 
	the government and the people rather than simply in the reserve accounts of 
	banks.  The national debt can 
	also be a good thing.  
	As Federal Reserve Board 
	Chairman Marriner 
	Eccles testified in hearings before the House Committee on Banking and 
	Currency in 1941, government credit (or debt) “is what our money system is. 
	If there were no debts in our money system, there wouldn’t be any 
	money.” 
	Properly directed, the national debt becomes the spending money of the 
	people.  
	It stimulates demand, stimulating productivity. 
	To keep the system stable and sustainable, the 
	money just needs to come from the nation’s own government and its own 
	people, and needs to return to the government and people.  
	 
	_______________________ Ellen 
	Brown is an attorney and president of the Public Banking Institute,
	
	http://PublicBankingInstitute.org. 
	In Web of Debt, her latest of eleven books, she shows how a 
	private cartel has usurped the power to create money from the people 
	themselves, and how we the people can get it back. Her websites are
	http://WebofDebt.com and
	http://EllenBrown.com.
	
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