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<font face="Verdana" size="1" color="#002864">http://www.mises.org/fullstory.asp?control=1054</font>
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<font face="Arial" size="2"><font face="Verdana" color="#002864" size="5"><strong>Can More Yen Save Japan?</strong></font>
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<font size="4">by Frank Shostak</font>
<font size="2">[Posted September 25, 2002]</font>
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<font size="2">The explosive ratio also indicates that various government
projects to lift the economy have been a large destroyer of the pool of real
funding. For if it had been otherwise, i.e., if the projects would had been
generating real wealth, then the government wouldn't have required so much
borrowing.</font>
<font size="2">In addition to this, the central bank has been engaged for
years in reckless monetary policy that weakened further the pool of real
funding. The aggressive nature of the monetary pumping by the BOJ is depicted
by the money base-to-trend ratio. After reaching 1.0 by March 1987, the ratio
climbed to 1.83 by April of this year (see chart). In short, the money base
stood 83 percent above its historical average in April this year.</font>
<p align="center"> </font>
<font size="2">It seems to us that the present production structure is so
distorted that it is almost like a"black hole" that only sucks in
the real funding with little hope of its release.</font>
<font size="2">But what about the fact that the Japanese are great savers?
Why is this not helping the economy? One needs to distinguish between the
saving of money and real saving. When a person places his money with a post
office savings bank (the traditional outlet for Japanese savers), he transfers
his claims over real savings to the post office. Now, when the post office
buys government bonds with this money, it transfers the claim over real
savings to the government. In short, real savings, rather than being employed
in generating wealth, will now be consumed. This is what has been going on in
Japan for years. (A product of tight government control of businesses that
amounts to prescribing to financial institutions the type of assets they can
invest in.)</font>
<font size="2">Moreover, it is important to emphasize here that some of the
money that is saved, i.e., stored, in the postal savings accounts has also
been created out of"thin air," implying that this money doesn't
represent any real savings. Again it must be reiterated that only real-wealth
generators can save,and neither government activities nor the outcome of loose
monetary policy falls under the category of real-wealth generation.</font>
<font size="2">Against this background, the latest proposal to revive the
economy through massive monetary pumping can only make things much worse. All
that is now needed in order to save the economy from further collapse is a
cessation of monetary pumping and cutting government involvement with the
economy back to the bone. The removal of the government from the economy will
put an end to the endless support for various activities which sprang up on
the back of loose fiscal and monetary policies and thereby will allow sound,
wealth-producing structures of production to emerge.</font>
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<font size="2"><strong>Summary and conclusion</strong> </font>
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<font size="2">Most experts are of the view that the latest Bank of Japan
plan to revive the financial system by direct purchases of stock held by
lending financial institutions can only further stifle an already severely
battered financial system. According to most experts, what Japan is currently
experiencing is a classical"liquidity trap." The only way out of
this trap, it is argued, is through extremely aggressive monetary pumping by
the BOJ that would lift consumers spending and revive the economy.</font>
<font size="2">We find this way of thinking extraordinary, considering the
fact that the BOJ has been pursuing an aggressive monetary policy for many
years. Moreover, during the past year and a half, the BOJ has intensified its
monetary injections, and yet the economy has continued to stagnate. The main
reason for this stagnation is not the mythical"liquidity trap," but
the collapse of the pool of real funding as a result of aggressive monetary
and fiscal policies. All that is now required to revive the economy is not
more of the same, which weakens the economy further, but a drastic reduction
of the government and central bank involvement with the economy.</font>
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<font size="2">Frank Shostak is an adjunct scholar of the Mises Institute
and a frequent contributor to Mises.org. Send him <font color="#000080" size="2">MAIL</font> and
see his outstanding Mises.org <font color="#3571ca" size="2">Articles
Archive</font>. Dr. Shostak expresses gratitude to Michael Ryan for
helpful comments during the writing of this article, and to Dr. Guido HĂŒlsmann
for a stimulating discussion on the subject.</font>
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<a title href="http://www.mises.org/fullstory.asp?control=1054#_ftnref1" name="_ftn1"><font size="2">[1]</font></a><font size="2"> FT.COM
Sep 9, 2002"Beyond interest rates," by Eric Lonergan.</font>
<a title href="http://www.mises.org/fullstory.asp?control=1054#_ftnref2" name="_ftn2"><font size="2">[2]</font></a><font size="2"> John
Maynard Keynes, The General Theory of Employment, Interest and
Money, Macmillan & Co. Ltd., 1964, p. 207.</font>
<a title href="http://www.mises.org/fullstory.asp?control=1054#_ftnref3" name="_ftn3"><font size="2">[3]</font></a><font size="2"> Ludwig
von Mises, Human Action, Contemporary Books, p. 490.</font>
<a title href="http://www.mises.org/fullstory.asp?control=1054#_ftnref4" name="_ftn4"><font size="2">[4]</font></a><font size="2"> Murray
N. Rothbard, Man Economy, and State, Nash
Publishing, p. 45.</font>
<a title href="http://www.mises.org/fullstory.asp?control=1054#_ftnref5" name="_ftn5"><font size="2">[5]</font></a><font size="2"> Richard
von Strigl, Capital & Production, Mises Institute, p. 7.
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