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Why 2010 Was Not Japan's Year

Japan Economy

MALCOLM FOSTER   12/27/10 09:44 AM ET   AP

TOKYO — Japan has been overtaken by China as the world's No. 2 economy. Its flagship company, Toyota, recalled more than 10 million vehicles in an embarrassing safety crisis. Its fourth prime minister resigned in three years, and the government remains unable to jolt an economy entering its third decade of stagnation.

For once-confident Japan, 2010 may well mark a symbolic milestone in its slide from economic giant to what experts see as its likely destiny: a second-tier power with some standout companies but limited global influence.

As Japanese drink up at year-end parties known as "bonen-kai," or "forget-the-year gatherings," this is one many will be happy to forget.

Problem is, there's little to look forward to. With a rapidly aging population, bulging national debt, political gridlock and a risk-averse culture slow to embrace change, Japan's prospects aren't promising. And a tense, high-seas spat with China has intensified fears of its neighbor as a military as well as economic threat.

A few optimists hope Japan can harness its strength in technology and its "Cool Japan" cultural appeal – from fashion and art to "anime" cartoons. The country needs to shed its reliance on manufacturing, they argue, and find new growth areas such as green energy, software engineering and health care for its elderly.

But talk to university students, and their outlook is bleak.

Many worry about finding steady jobs and whether they can support families – concerns that have contributed to Japan's low fertility rate of 1.3 children per woman. Average household income has fallen 9 percent since 1993.

Makoto Miyazaki, a 22-year-old student at prestigious Keio University in Tokyo, senses forces outside his control – and Japan's – are going to dictate his future.

"Internationally, Japan is between big countries like China and the U.S. And Korea is becoming a major competitor – that's a big threat to Japan," he said. "I feel like we have fewer choices."

It's a startling contrast with the 1980s, when Japan was flush with cash and some experts believed its economy was poised to dominate the world.

Millions have given up the goal of lifetime employment at a major corporation and become "freeters," flitting among temporary jobs with few if any benefits. As companies cut costs, temporary workers have grown to a third of the work force, up from 16 percent in the mid-1980s.

Further, the population is projected to fall from 127 million to 90 million by 2055 – 40 percent of them over the age of 65. That's going to place a heavy tax burden on workers.

Economic difficulty is a chief reason more than 30,000 Japanese have committed suicide every year for the past 12 years.

Hopes for change from the Democratic Party, which toppled the long-ruling conservatives last year, have fizzled. The Democrats lost control of the upper house of parliament in July elections, setting the stage for political gridlock.

Prime Minister Naoto Kan has acknowledged Japan's declining status.

His prescription: "Open up the country." He advocates reducing trade barriers, loosening regulations and making the country a more attractive place to invest.

His Cabinet recently approved cutting the corporate tax rate by 5 percentage points to 35 percent and is weighing whether Japan should join a U.S.-led free trade zone, the Trans-Pacific Partnership, that would slash tariffs on everything from electronics to food.

Business leaders say doing so is vital, but farmers fear a flood of cheaper imports would ruin them. Analysts say it could be a vehicle for economic revival but also lead to job losses and social dislocation, especially in rural areas.

"Merely unleashing the forces of competition and the free market isn't going to do the trick because people who feel vulnerable will crawl back into whatever they have," said Koichi Nakano, a political science professor at Sophia University in Tokyo.

Nakano and others say sweeping changes are needed in both policy and mindset, from expanding the social safety net to overcoming a deep fear of failure that has constrained entrepreneurship and risk-taking – and Japan's economic potential.

About 77 percent of Japan's jobless aren't getting unemployment benefits, according to International Labor Organization data, in part because temporary workers don't qualify.

Japan can be innovative: It is the world leader in hybrid vehicles and industrial robots. Nintendo's "Wii" gaming console is a hit in living rooms around the world. Entrepreneur Tadashi Yanai, Japan's richest person, built Fast Retailing Co. and its low-cost Uniqlo brand into one of Asia's biggest clothing retailers.

But Japan sometimes undermines itself by being insular. Its sophisticated mobile phone industry, for example, has failed to grow overseas because it operates on a network hardly used anywhere else – earning it the nickname "Galapagos Syndrome."

One optimist is Michael Alfant, an American who has worked in Japan for 20 years. He sees the country becoming more entrepreneurial and focusing on opportunities in service industries.

"Japan is reinventing itself," said Alfant, CEO of Fusion Systems, a startup software company, and the incoming president of the American Chamber of Commerce in Japan. "I'm very confident Japan will get there."

Any change is likely to come gradually.

A conformist, consensus-based culture means Japan is generally slow to make changes or respond to crises – as seen in Toyota Motor Corp.'s handling of its safety woes.

"One would think there would be more of a sense of urgency here," said Jeff Kingston, director of Asian Studies at Temple University's Tokyo campus. "At best, Japan will muddle through, meaning it will avert catastrophe, but it is hard to see anything but bleak prospects in a country that should be doing better given its enormous strengths."

Japan seems destined to follow in the footsteps of former global powers such as France and Britain. That's not necessarily bad, said Sophia's Nakano.

"If you manage the decline reasonably well and turn things around in a different direction," he said, "it's possible to retain some influence and reinvent oneself as a soft power, a relevant player on the world stage."

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TOKYO — Japan has been overtaken by China as the world's No. 2 economy. Its flagship company, Toyota, recalled more than 10 million vehicles in an embarrassing safety crisis. Its fourth prime mi...
TOKYO — Japan has been overtaken by China as the world's No. 2 economy. Its flagship company, Toyota, recalled more than 10 million vehicles in an embarrassing safety crisis. Its fourth prime mi...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MikeyJaii
Socialism.
02:59 PM on 12/29/2010
When Americans take back their country, it'll be our turn.
03:01 PM on 12/28/2010
No year is going to be Japan's year. They have a demographic problem, it's us in 2040+ on steroids.
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sdgrrl
Stay independent and always question your leaders.
04:52 PM on 12/28/2010
I disagree- this was us 20 years ago and it has been increasing. Japan is finally catching up to us.
11:05 AM on 12/28/2010
I've been living in Japan for the past five years now. The biggest problem, IMHO, is political gridlock. It's an old boys club in a bad way. They just keep playing musical chairs--taking turns being P.M.--but nothing is getting done.

Japan has enormous untapped potential. They have an incredibly well educated workforce and high-tech industry. And most people are financially stable despite the bad news. The economy is not in constant expansion, but it is stable.

What they don't have is sufficient political will with which to martial a common vision and direction.
10:37 AM on 12/28/2010
This reads like a futuristic piece about the U.S.

Japan 2010 could easily be USA 2020--I am not looking forward to it.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
GrownupStewie
08:03 PM on 12/27/2010
the 21st century will not be the century for japan
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AudiGuy
There's something beyond one's self
05:47 PM on 12/27/2010
Why? One word - manufacturing.
05:57 AM on 12/28/2010
You nail it: it is manufacturing that makes the difference.

Only manufacturing can absorb large porportion of the work force and enable the continuing research and development.

The Germans know it TOO WELL and aggressively keeps the manufacturing jobs at home. So Germany is still the shining economic star after so many years of running strong.
02:06 PM on 12/27/2010
This story could just as well be about the U.S.. They have been in trouble since the nineties. This is our future as well. Isn't globalization fun?
01:26 PM on 12/27/2010
Japan's exports don't seem to be competing as well, but they definitely have the brainpower and resources to make huge innovations, such as in green technology which is exploding in Japan. They have a keen sense of design and fashion, from their automobiles, in which there's a great deal more appealing models to choose from than what's available in the U.S., and their clothing - which would be very appealing and trendy internationally. There seems to be so much excess of everything, such as clothing, that they could fit the world with a new wardrobe. I've never seen so many shops in my life competing for the young, trendy Japanese who have an insatiable appetite for fashion. Young, trendy foreigners would eat this stuff up.....and speaking of eating, if only the U.S. had half the nutrition of the traditional Japanese diet, there might be a big drop in heart disease. If only a countries could sell their good ideas, rather than goods, more countries could prosper.
06:02 AM on 12/28/2010
France is much more fashionable than Germany.

Who is the economic power house in EU? It is Germany.

One word; manufacturing.

Your observation is artificial and not planting your feet firmly on hard, dirty and fertile soil.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
wikwox
So there I was, playing the piano....
01:14 PM on 12/27/2010
Sounds like America sans the predators on Wall St. Both country's are looking at a tough future. But despite the endless praise China is no rock of stability, under the bustling surface theres always the potential for civil unrest or even a revolt. At some point the rest of the world will fight back with all means fair or foul and the golden age of China will not look quit so bright.
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Pandoras Folly
This Micro-bio is of legendary quality
01:12 PM on 12/27/2010
I honestly feel Japans greatest future opprotunity lays within one project they are researching. the space elevator. If they could develop a cheap left platform of some kind they would revolutionize the world economy, it would be bigger than the invention of the railroad. eventually more stuff would be coming down then going up. If america and Japan would capitalize on their massive tech, space, and industrial advantages in this one field we would rise like eagles. Cheap metals, super precision products that could only be made in zero gravity, and cheap power for the taking if we can just get up there. just using current tech we could put up a tower a couple of thousand clicks tall.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Skaterx999
02:39 PM on 12/27/2010
That and the solar power satellite.
12:28 PM on 12/27/2010
The yen is still raging strong against the dollar...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Majestry
12:16 PM on 12/27/2010
I fear the fate of the US will not be as soft as that of Japan.
12:38 AM on 12/28/2010
Not will all those guns and rude behavior. Hello civil war.