NY Times October 16, 2010
Japan Goes From Dynamic to Disheartened
By MARTIN FACKLER

OSAKA, Japan — Like many members of Japan’s middle class, Masato Y. 
enjoyed a level of affluence two decades ago that was the envy of the 
world. Masato, a small-business owner, bought a $500,000 condominium, 
vacationed in Hawaii and drove a late-model Mercedes.

But his living standards slowly crumbled along with Japan’s overall 
economy. First, he was forced to reduce trips abroad and then eliminate 
them. Then he traded the Mercedes for a cheaper domestic model. Last 
year, he sold his condo — for a third of what he paid for it, and for 
less than what he still owed on the mortgage he took out 17 years ago.

“Japan used to be so flashy and upbeat, but now everyone must live in a 
dark and subdued way,” said Masato, 49, who asked that his full name not 
be used because he still cannot repay the $110,000 that he owes on the 
mortgage.

Few nations in recent history have seen such a striking reversal of 
economic fortune as Japan. The original Asian success story, Japan rode 
one of the great speculative stock and property bubbles of all time in 
the 1980s to become the first Asian country to challenge the long 
dominance of the West.

But the bubbles popped in the late 1980s and early 1990s, and Japan fell 
into a slow but relentless decline that neither enormous budget deficits 
nor a flood of easy money has reversed. For nearly a generation now, the 
nation has been trapped in low growth and a corrosive downward spiral of 
prices, known as deflation, in the process shriveling from an economic 
Godzilla to little more than an afterthought in the global economy.

Now, as the United States and other Western nations struggle to recover 
from a debt and property bubble of their own, a growing number of 
economists are pointing to Japan as a dark vision of the future. Even as 
the Federal Reserve chairman, Ben S. Bernanke, prepares a fresh round of 
unconventional measures to stimulate the economy, there are growing 
fears that the United States and many European economies could face a 
prolonged period of slow growth or even, in the worst case, deflation, 
something not seen on a sustained basis outside Japan since the Great 
Depression.

Many economists remain confident that the United States will avoid the 
stagnation of Japan, largely because of the greater responsiveness of 
the American political system and Americans’ greater tolerance for 
capitalism’s creative destruction. Japanese leaders at first denied the 
severity of their nation’s problems and then spent heavily on 
job-creating public works projects that only postponed painful but 
necessary structural changes, economists say.

“We’re not Japan,” said Robert E. Hall, a professor of economics at 
Stanford. “In America, the bet is still that we will somehow find ways 
to get people spending and investing again.”

Still, as political pressure builds to reduce federal spending and 
budget deficits, other economists are now warning of “Japanification” — 
of falling into the same deflationary trap of collapsed demand that 
occurs when consumers refuse to consume, corporations hold back on 
investments and banks sit on cash. It becomes a vicious, 
self-reinforcing cycle: as prices fall further and jobs disappear, 
consumers tighten their purse strings even more and companies cut back 
on spending and delay expansion plans.

“The U.S., the U.K., Spain, Ireland, they all are going through what 
Japan went through a decade or so ago,” said Richard Koo, chief 
economist at Nomura Securities who recently wrote a book about Japan’s 
lessons for the world. “Millions of individuals and companies see their 
balance sheets going underwater, so they are using their cash to pay 
down debt instead of borrowing and spending.”

Just as inflation scarred a generation of Americans, deflation has left 
a deep imprint on the Japanese, breeding generational tensions and a 
culture of pessimism, fatalism and reduced expectations. While Japan 
remains in many ways a prosperous society, it faces an increasingly grim 
situation, particularly outside the relative economic vibrancy of Tokyo, 
and its situation provides a possible glimpse into the future for the 
United States and Europe, should the most dire forecasts come to pass.

Scaled-Back Ambitions

The downsizing of Japan’s ambitions can be seen on the streets of Tokyo, 
where concrete “microhouses” have become popular among younger Japanese 
who cannot afford even the famously cramped housing of their parents, or 
lack the job security to take out a traditional multidecade loan.

These matchbox-size homes stand on plots of land barely large enough to 
park a sport utility vehicle, yet have three stories of closet-size 
bedrooms, suitcase-size closets and a tiny kitchen that properly belongs 
on a submarine.

“This is how to own a house even when you are uneasy about the future,” 
said Kimiyo Kondo, general manager at Zaus, a Tokyo-based company that 
builds microhouses.

For many people under 40, it is hard to grasp just how far this is from 
the 1980s, when a mighty — and threatening — “Japan Inc.” seemed ready 
to obliterate whole American industries, from automakers to 
supercomputers. With the Japanese stock market quadrupling and the yen 
rising to unimagined heights, Japan’s companies dominated global 
business, gobbling up trophy properties like Hollywood movie studios 
(Universal Studios and Columbia Pictures), famous golf courses (Pebble 
Beach) and iconic real estate (Rockefeller Center).

In 1991, economists were predicting that Japan would overtake the United 
States as the world’s largest economy by 2010. In fact, Japan’s economy 
remains the same size it was then: a gross domestic product of $5.7 
trillion at current exchange rates. During the same period, the United 
States economy doubled in size to $14.7 trillion, and this year China 
overtook Japan to become the world’s No. 2 economy.

China has so thoroughly eclipsed Japan that few American intellectuals 
seem to bother with Japan now, and once crowded Japanese-language 
classes at American universities have emptied. Even Clyde V. Prestowitz, 
a former Reagan administration trade negotiator whose writings in the 
1980s about Japan’s threat to the United States once stirred alarm in 
Washington, said he was now studying Chinese. “I hardly go to Japan 
anymore,” Mr. Prestowitz said.

The decline has been painful for the Japanese, with companies and 
individuals like Masato having lost the equivalent of trillions of 
dollars in the stock market, which is now just a quarter of its value in 
1989, and in real estate, where the average price of a home is the same 
as it was in 1983. And the future looks even bleaker, as Japan faces the 
world’s largest government debt — around 200 percent of gross domestic 
product — a shrinking population and rising rates of poverty and suicide.

But perhaps the most noticeable impact here has been Japan’s crisis of 
confidence. Just two decades ago, this was a vibrant nation filled with 
energy and ambition, proud to the point of arrogance and eager to create 
a new economic order in Asia based on the yen. Today, those high-flying 
ambitions have been shelved, replaced by weariness and fear of the 
future, and an almost stifling air of resignation. Japan seems to have 
pulled into a shell, content to accept its slow fade from the global stage.

Its once voracious manufacturers now seem prepared to surrender industry 
after industry to hungry South Korean and Chinese rivals. Japanese 
consumers, who once flew by the planeload on flashy shopping trips to 
Manhattan and Paris, stay home more often now, saving their money for an 
uncertain future or setting new trends in frugality with discount brands 
like Uniqlo.

As living standards in this still wealthy nation slowly erode, a new 
frugality is apparent among a generation of young Japanese, who have 
known nothing but economic stagnation and deflation. They refuse to buy 
big-ticket items like cars or televisions, and fewer choose to study 
abroad in America.

Japan’s loss of gumption is most visible among its young men, who are 
widely derided as “herbivores” for lacking their elders’ willingness to 
toil for endless hours at the office, or even to succeed in romance, 
which many here blame, only half jokingly, for their country’s shrinking 
birthrate. “The Japanese used to be called economic animals,” said 
Mitsuo Ohashi, former chief executive officer of the chemicals giant 
Showa Denko. “But somewhere along the way, Japan lost its animal spirits.”

When asked in dozens of interviews about their nation’s decline, 
Japanese, from policy makers and corporate chieftains to shoppers on the 
street, repeatedly mention this startling loss of vitality. While Japan 
suffers from many problems, most prominently the rapid graying of its 
society, it is this decline of a once wealthy and dynamic nation into a 
deep social and cultural rut that is perhaps Japan’s most ominous lesson 
for the world today.

The classic explanation of the evils of deflation is that it makes 
individuals and businesses less willing to use money, because the 
rational way to act when prices are falling is to hold onto cash, which 
gains in value. But in Japan, nearly a generation of deflation has had a 
much deeper effect, subconsciously coloring how the Japanese view the 
world. It has bred a deep pessimism about the future and a fear of 
taking risks that make people instinctively reluctant to spend or 
invest, driving down demand — and prices — even further.

“A new common sense appears, in which consumers see it as irrational or 
even foolish to buy or borrow,” said Kazuhisa Takemura, a professor at 
Waseda University in Tokyo who has studied the psychology of deflation.

A Deflated City

While the effects are felt across Japan’s economy, they are more 
apparent in regions like Osaka, the third-largest city, than in 
relatively prosperous Tokyo. In this proudly commercial city, merchants 
have gone to extremes to coax shell-shocked shoppers into spending 
again. But this often takes the shape of price wars that end up only 
feeding Japan’s deflationary spiral.

There are vending machines that sell canned drinks for 10 yen, or 12 
cents; restaurants with 50-yen beer; apartments with the first month’s 
rent of just 100 yen, about $1.22. Even marriage ceremonies are on sale, 
with discount wedding halls offering weddings for $600 — less than a 
tenth of what ceremonies typically cost here just a decade ago.

On Senbayashi, an Osaka shopping street, merchants recently held a 
100-yen day, offering much of their merchandise for that price. Even 
then, they said, the results were disappointing.

“It’s like Japanese have even lost the desire to look good,” said Akiko 
Oka, 63, who works part time in a small apparel shop, a job she has held 
since her own clothing store went bankrupt in 2002.

This loss of vigor is sometimes felt in unusual places. Kitashinchi is 
Osaka’s premier entertainment district, a three-centuries-old playground 
where the night is filled with neon signs and hostesses in tight 
dresses, where just taking a seat at a top club can cost $500.

But in the past 15 years, the number of fashionable clubs and lounges 
has shrunk to 480 from 1,200, replaced by discount bars and chain 
restaurants. Bartenders say the clientele these days is too 
cost-conscious to show the studied disregard for money that was long 
considered the height of refinement.

“A special culture might be vanishing,” said Takao Oda, who mixes 
perfectly crafted cocktails behind the glittering gold countertop at his 
Bar Oda.

After years of complacency, Japan appears to be waking up to its 
problems, as seen last year when disgruntled voters ended the virtual 
postwar monopoly on power of the Liberal Democratic Party. However, for 
many Japanese, it may be too late. Japan has already created an entire 
generation of young people who say they have given up on believing that 
they can ever enjoy the job stability or rising living standards that 
were once considered a birthright here.

Yukari Higaki, 24, said the only economic conditions she had ever known 
were ones in which prices and salaries seemed to be in permanent 
decline. She saves as much money as she can by buying her clothes at 
discount stores, making her own lunches and forgoing travel abroad. She 
said that while her generation still lived comfortably, she and her 
peers were always in a defensive crouch, ready for the worst.

“We are the survival generation,” said Ms. Higaki, who works part time 
at a furniture store.

Hisakazu Matsuda, president of Japan Consumer Marketing Research 
Institute, who has written several books on Japanese consumers, has a 
different name for Japanese in their 20s; he calls them the 
consumption-haters. He estimates that by the time this generation hits 
their 60s, their habits of frugality will have cost the Japanese economy 
$420 billion in lost consumption.

“There is no other generation like this in the world,” Mr. Matsuda said. 
“These guys think it’s stupid to spend.”

Deflation has also affected businesspeople by forcing them to invent new 
ways to survive in an economy where prices and profits only go down, not up.

Yoshinori Kaiami was a real estate agent in Osaka, where, like the rest 
of Japan, land prices have been falling for most of the past 19 years. 
Mr. Kaiami said business was tough. There were few buyers in a market 
that was virtually guaranteed to produce losses, and few sellers, 
because most homeowners were saddled with loans that were worth more 
than their homes.

Some years ago, he came up with an idea to break the gridlock. He 
created a company that guides homeowners through an elaborate legal 
subterfuge in which they erase the original loan by declaring personal 
bankruptcy, but continue to live in their home by “selling” it to a 
relative, who takes out a smaller loan to pay its greatly reduced price.

“If we only had inflation again, this sort of business would not be 
necessary,” said Mr. Kaiami, referring to the rising prices that are the 
opposite of deflation. “I feel like I’ve been waiting for 20 years for 
inflation to come back.”

One of his customers was Masato, the small-business owner, who sold his 
four-bedroom condo to a relative for about $185,000, 15 years after 
buying it for a bit more than $500,000. He said he was still 
deliberating about whether to expunge the $110,000 he still owed his 
bank by declaring personal bankruptcy.

Economists said one reason deflation became self-perpetuating was that 
it pushed companies and people like Masato to survive by cutting costs 
and selling what they already owned, instead of buying new goods or 
investing.

“Deflation destroys the risk-taking that capitalist economies need in 
order to grow,” said Shumpei Takemori, an economist at Keio University 
in Tokyo. “Creative destruction is replaced with what is just 
destructive destruction.”

Steve Lohr contributed reporting from New York.
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