by
Wolf Richter www.testosteronepit.com
www.amazon.com/author/wolfrichter
Japan’s new economic religion, lovingly
dubbed Abenomics, relies mostly on a money-printing binge that
monetizes the entire government deficit plus a chunk of its public
debt, month after month. Printing yourself out of trouble and to
wealth works every time. For the elite. This is a lesson learned from
the Fed. But how are workers and consumers faring? And by implication
the real economy?
We keep getting juicy morsels of data on this
phenomenon. Abenomics is accomplishing its two major goals –
watering down the yen and stirring up inflation – pretty well. Over
the last 12 months, the yen has been devalued by 20% against the
dollar that the Fed is trying to devalue as well. So this is quite a
feat! It’s been devalued by 28% against the euro. And inflation is
heating up.
The consumer
price index, released today, rose 0.1% in October and is now up
1.1% for the 12-month period. Less “imputed rent,” inflation rose
1.4% year over year. Service prices were up 0.4%, but goods prices
jumped 1.9%. At this rate, Abenomics will have no problems meeting or
exceeding by March, 2015, its “2% price stability” target, as the
Bank of Japan has come to call it with bitter cynicism.
What isn’t happening: wage increases!
The
Japanese Statistics Bureau just reported incomes
and expenditures of households with two or more persons.
This is by far the largest category of households in Japan. Due to
the cost of housing in large urban areas – and due to remnants of
tradition – a large number of singles live with their parents. This
category is further divided into “workers’ households,” “no
occupation” households, and “other” households.
Incomes
of the all-important “workers’ households” rose a measly 0.1%
from a year ago to ¥482,684. In nominal terms.
But adjusted for inflation – yes, here is where the benefits of
Abenomics are kicking in – incomes fell
1.3%.
Disposable incomes fell
1.4%.
The details were ugly: “Current income” (salaries and wages)
dropped 1.2% and “temporary bonuses” plunged 19.5%. Income from
self-employment and piecework plummeted 20.8%.
So
these strung-out workers’ households whose belts are being
tightened by Abenomics and whose real incomes are being whittled away
by inflation, how can they spend more to perk up the economy? Turns
out, they don’t. Spending rose a scant 0.4% in nominal terms
from a year ago – but adjusted for inflation, spending fell 1.0%.
And this despite rampant frontloading of
big-ticket purchases. The consumption-tax hike from 5% to 8%, to take
effect on April 1, is motivating households to buy big-ticket items
now and save 3%. It has turned into a frenzy. Durable goods
purchases, the primary target of frontloading, jumped 40.4% in
October from a year ago. While it’s goosing the economy now, it
will create a hole starting next spring. Japan has been through this
before.
When the consumption tax hike from 3% to 5% was
passed in 1996, Japanese consumers went out on a buying binge of
big-ticket items to avoid paying the extra 2% in taxes, and the
economy boomed. The hangover came around April 1, 1997, when the tax
hike became effective. The economy skittered into a recession that
lasted a year and a half. Now Japanese households are frontloading to
avoid an additional 3% in consumption tax. The hangover next year is
going to be painful.
But frontloading of a few big-ticket items is
hitting day-to-day expenditures. These households spent 1.8% less on
non-durable goods and 2.0% less on services, compared to prior year.
Hence, the drop of 1% in overall spending by these households,
despite their splurging on a few big items.
This
is the benefit of inflation
without compensation! A
process that ever so slowly hollows out the middle class and pushes
the lower classes deeper in the quagmire. It’s hurting workers and
consumers. It’s constraining the real economy. Yet, holders of
assets that the central bank inflates into the stratosphere benefit.
Japan isn’t the only country that is practicing this large-scale
redistribution of wealth from workers to holders of inflated assets.
Abenomics is following the playbook of the Fed. But it’s pushing it
further to the extreme.
The
dogfight over Japan’s biggest problem, its gargantuan government
deficit, entered its annual ritual of leaks and pressure tactics that
usually lead to a pre-Christmas draft budget with an even
bigger deficit.
But this time, it’s different. Very different. Read….. Japan
Is Used To Natural Disasters, But This One Is Man-Made
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