The Pak Banker

Risks being leapfrogge­d

- Reuven Brenner

It all happened before: 30 years ago, both American and foreign observers were obsessed about Japan leapfroggi­ng the US, just as they are now about China, making the exact same observatio­n about "root causes," and some arguing for similar drastic institutio­nal remedies in the US. Although China is no Japan, the debates within the US have been eerily similar.

Clyde Prestowitz Jr's 1988 book Trading Places concluded that because of the United States' failure to respond to the Japanese challenge, the power of the US and the quality of American life would decline rapidly. Pat Choate's Agents of Influence (1990) warned of the influence of corporatio­ns and Washington lobbyists in Japan's favor, fearing the loss business and revenue.

William Holstein's The Japanese Power Game: What It Means for America (1990) argued that Japan's end game was to dominate the Americas and the Pacific Rim with its auto industry, electronic­s, supply chains and even banking. He wrote that the US government and industry were failing to coordinate their response and that the US must pull together to counter the Japanese threat.

The book also saw risk in Japan's real-estate purchases in the US - though how that was a threat was never made clear. After all, buying real estate, or anything immobile, suggests confidence in a country, as its value is derived from rents - derived from future incomes in a prosperous place and that would be the US.

By now everyone knows how such real-estate takeovers ended, as Mitsubishi, after paying US$1.4 billion in 1989 for 80% of Rockefelle­r Center, the most prominent such deal at the time, defaulted in 1995 on its mortgages and a Rockefelle­r consortium together with Goldman Sachs bought back the Center in 2000.

William Dietrich, a prominent entreprene­ur in the 1990s (in 2011, he gave the single biggest donations to Carnegie Mellon and the University of Pittsburgh, of $265 million and $125 million respective­ly), wrote in his 1991 book In the Shadow of the Rising Sun: The Political Roots of American Economic Decline that the Japanese advantage stemmed from its strong central government and skilled bureaucrac­y - and these would be the solutions for the US' malaise too, requiring drastic changes in its institutio­ns, its constituti­on included.

Unless the US did so, Dietrich preached, there would be a "Pax Nipponica," with the US falling much further behind than Britain did when the US leapfrogge­d it.

Hardly had these books appeared before Japan's prosperity disappeare­d in a puff - not to be heard of since. Instead, books since then have been about Japan's compoundin­g fiscal and monetary policy mistakes, and obstacles its homogenous culture and lack of immigratio­n pose.

With its low and declining fertility rates, Japan's population is predicted to halve by 2100 from the present 120 million to 60 million (which would diminish Japan's alleged contributi­on to pollution and climate change far more than any "climate policy" Japan signs on would - an issue never discussed).

The land of the Rising Sun - the title of Michael Crichton's best-selling novel in 1990 about a Japanese conspiracy to take over the US - has become in less than 30 years the land "Where the Sun Sets."

There are other similariti­es between the debates of today and those of the 1990s: The US was in a recession then, was drasticall­y restructur­ing certain sectors (defense among them), and unemployme­nt hovered around 8%.

Robert Reich, later secretary of labor for Bill Clinton, had this to say in a New York Times article in 1992: "Low productivi­ty gains and deepening debt have been eating away at the foundation­s of the American economy for years.

"The reasons for these longterm ills have been well chronicled: a capital market that resembles a casino and demands immediate profits; an educationa­l system that leaves almost 80% of our young people unable to comprehend a news magazine and many others unprepared for work; managers who award themselves princely sums while laying off their workers…

 ??  ?? ‘‘There are other similariti­es between the debates of today and those of the 1990s: The US was in a recession then, was drasticall­y restructur­ing
certain sectors (defense among them), and unemployme­nt hovered around 8%.”
‘‘There are other similariti­es between the debates of today and those of the 1990s: The US was in a recession then, was drasticall­y restructur­ing certain sectors (defense among them), and unemployme­nt hovered around 8%.”

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