Wolf Richter www.testosteronepit.com www.amazon.com/author/wolfrichter
Even
the soothsayers and Abenomics spin doctors expected a downdraft after
Japan’s consumption tax was jacked up to 8% from 5%, effective April 1.
But not this.
The tax
hike had been pushed through parliament by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s
predecessor. It was supposed to save Japan. But no one wants to pay for government
spending. The tax proved to be so unpopular that Prime Minister Noda
and his government were unceremoniously ousted at the end of 2012.
Japan
is in terrible fiscal trouble. Half of every yen the government spends
is borrowed, now printed by the Bank of Japan. Expenditures can’t be
cut, apparently, and government handouts to Japan Inc. had to be
increased. Yet something had to be done to keep the gargantuan deficit
from blowing up the machinery altogether, and it was done to those who
spend money.
The
consumption tax is very broad, impacting goods and services bought by
businesses and individuals, from haircuts and vegetables to construction
materials. So the 3-percentage-point increase would be levied on much
of the economy.
But
here is the thing: money that people and companies keep in the bank
earns nearly nothing, and even a crappy 10-year Japanese Government Bond
yields less than 0.6% per year. But if buyers frontloaded major
purchases by a few months or even a year to beat the consumption-tax
increase – buying that refrigerator or heavy-duty truck a year earlier
than they normally would, for example – they’d save 3% of the purchase
amount. That’s pure income. And tax-free for individuals. The biggest
no-brainer in Japanese financial history.
Every
company and individual frontloaded whatever was sufficiently practical
and substantive, and whatever they could afford. It started late last
year and culminated in the January-March quarter. As a result, GDP
soared at an annual rate of 5.9%, a phenomenal accomplishment for Japan.
The
Japanese have been through this before. Ahead of the prior
consumption-tax hike from 3% to 5% effective April 1, 1997, consumers
and businesses went on a buying binge of big-ticket items. The economy
boomed for a couple of quarters, then woke up with a terrific hangover
as spending on durables by businesses and consumers ground to a halt,
and the economy skittered into a nasty recession that lasted a year and a
half!
But this time, it’s different. On March 23, about a week before the tax hike would take effect, the Nikkei polled
corporate executives as they were still floating on a sea of optimism
from all the money that rampant frontloading was bringing in faster than
they could count. They weren’t concerned: 70.2% said that sales would
remain stable or decline no more than 5% in fiscal 2014, which started
April 1; 55.4% said the economy, supported by strong consumer spending,
would improve by September, and 74.3% saw that happening no later than
December. So no big deal.
Alas, the Ministry of Economics, Trade, and Industry just released a dose of reality.
Total retail sales in April plunged 19.8% from March and were down 4.4%
year over year. But this includes sales of perishable and small items
not suited for frontloading, and convenience-store sales (which rose a
smidgen). In stores where people buy durable goods, such as appliances,
watches, or cars, sales were awful.
At
“large retailers,” sales swooned 25.0% from March and 5.4% year over
year. At supermarkets, where people also buy some durable goods, sales
fell 3.9% year over year – people even stocked up on non-perishable food
and beverages. At department stores, where people buy jewelry, designer
clothing, or French purses, sales fell 10.6% year over year. It wasn’t
just retail. Sales between businesses – nearly 2.5 times the value of
retail sales – plunged 20.4% from March and 3.7% year over year. In
short, it was the largest decline in sales since March 2011, when the
Great East Japan Earthquake and tsunami that killed over 19,000 people,
brought commerce to a near-standstill.
Those
sales were in prices that had been inflated by 3%. That tax-hike money
doesn’t stay with the seller but is turned over to the government. In
actual merchandise sales, the scenario is 3 percentage points worse. So
sales at, for example, large retailers on a comparable basis dropped
28%, not 25%.
At the
end of January, the Japan Automobile Manufacturers Association (JAMA)
forecast that passenger and commercial vehicle sales would dive 9.8% in
fiscal 2014, to 4.85 million units, the lowest since earthquake year
2011. JAMA’s prediction was pooh-poohed as catastrophist.
Turns out, the good people at JAMA are optimists; vehicle sales got demolished in
April. As measured by registrations, all categories plunged: new cars
-60.3% from March; mini cars (with tiny 500cc engines) -48.9%; trucks of
all sizes, including minis -58.0%. Total vehicles sales, retail and
commercial, cars, trucks, and buses plummeted 63.3% to 345,226 units,
down from 939,761 units in March.
It was
the worst performance since the 292,043 units that were sold April 2011,
the first full month after the horrific earthquake. Even March 2011 had
been better as the first ten days had been tracking normally. Here is
the chart of that epic collapse in total vehicle sales:
Most of
the vehicles sold in Japan are made in Japan – despite decades of
screaming by US automakers, which have yet to get their foot in the
door. This means production schedules are going to get cut, hours will
be reduced, component purchases will be whittled down…. And the whole
chain reaction of a large complex manufacturing sector slowing down will
worm its way into the statistics over the coming months. Same as in
1997.
The
slowdown will add to the slowdown already underway in business and
consumer spending on durable goods. And all the hype about the
phenomenal January-March quarter and how Abenomics was performing
miracles, and how consumers were finally starting to spend is already
turning into furious spin-doctoring as economists are fanning out to
explain that this time, it’ll be different, that April was just a blip,
that all this frontloading won’t lead to a long recession, as it did
last time.
And on
May 30, the hapless Japanese consumers woke up to find out officially
what they’d already figured out on their own: inflation in April had
soared 3.4% for all items from a year earlier, with goods prices up a dizzying 5.2%.
But their incomes have been stagnating. The wrath of Abenomics is
slamming them: inflation without compensation. Inflation mongers will be
ecstatic, but this can’t possibly be good for the Japanese people, or
the economy.
China’s
actions “discourage” Japanese corporations from doing business there,
said the Japanese government, and that’s exactly what has been happening
for months. In a most dramatic way and where it hurts China the most.
Read….. Exodus of Japan Inc. Slams China
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