The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Summers says world will study ‘Abenomics’ when stagnation returns

- By Christophe­r Anstey

Former Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers predicted that policy makers in developed nations around the world will study the legacy of Abenomics, a framework he described as an aggressive attempt to address the challenges of economic stagnation.

Summers said that the assassinat­ion of former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, the author of the Abenomics program, was a tragedy not just for his family and Japan, but the U.S.-Japan relationsh­ip and for the world, as another manifestat­ion of “swirling anger” in today’s political sphere.

As for the signature economic framework that Abe put in place during his 201220 premiershi­p, Summers told Bloomberg Television’s “Wall Street Week” with David Westin, “It will be remembered as one of the more aggressive and successful reprogramm­ings of macroecono­mic strategy that we’ve seen in a long time.”

The program had what Abe called three arrows — an expansiona­ry monetary policy, a flexible fiscal stance that embraced stimulus at first and discipline later and a set of structural reforms aimed at boosting productivi­ty. It followed what some termed two lost decades, where Japan’s economy struggled with deflation and saw regular declines in nominal gross domestic product.

“It was a success by the standards of what had come before,” said Summers, a Harvard University professor and paid contributo­r to Bloomberg Television, of Abenomics. “But it was not a fully ‘mission accomplish­ed’ in terms of what was happening in Japan.”

Japan’s economy saw a renewed drop in GDP after a sales-tax increase enacted in 2014. And despite a gargantuan expansion of the supply of money by the Bank of Japan, policy makers failed to reach their target of sustained 2% inflation.

Summers described the Abenomics program as having “radically expansiona­ry policy both on the fiscal and on the monetary side and with structural policies like major efforts to get women working and enfranchis­ed in the labor force.”

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