Tuesday, April 3, 2012

Japan's Collapse Will Be Absolute and it Cannot be Stopped - Here's Some BIG Reasons Why


Truly this country is in a position whereby there will be no way out. The government has dragged us into a cesspool of debt and there will be no fix. The nuclear disaster has put the nation is a position whereby political populism has taken the driver's seat over cool-headed reasoning. 


Japan can't last like this for much longer. I hope I'm wrong about this but I think it looks like our situation is impossible to fix. And I do not exaggerate when I say "impossible to fix." Some will scoff at this but I ask you to read on and see what conclusions you come to. Let me know if you disagree. 


Please keep in mind these three important points as you read on. I think these three make a poisonous cocktail:


*Japan's debt to GDP is too high
*The energy crisis will much further ruin the employment and the economic situation here
*The energy crisis will also cause a hollowing out of Japanese industry


The only good news is that there will be no sales tax increase as prime minister Noda will be, as I've already predicted, out by September 1st at the latest. I seriously doubt that he can last that long. The other good news is that more Japanese fathers will be spending time with their kids as they will be out of jobs.


But first up, about that sales tax problem and our soon-to-be ex-prime minister. From an article that ran at Testosterone Pit in Feb: Unpopularity Contest at the Edge of the Japanese Abyss:  

In a Kyodo News telephone poll over the weekend, Noda’s approval rating dropped to 29%, down 6.8 points from January, and down a dizzying 50 points in less than six months. The disapproval rating jumped to 55.2%. Only Taro Aso fell faster. But at the current trajectory in the prime-ministerial unpopularity contest, Noda might beat his records soon:

Looking at the graph above, you'd see how Noda's popularity was just crashing in his first 5 months in office. Interestingly though, he got a minimal reprieve last month in March 2012. His popularity actually went up 2.5%!:

While not in the least bit scientific, I have projected Noda's popularity with the black arrow. I think this is being quite generous considering the fact that his cabinet actually publicly presented their plan to increase the public tax burden. Please refer to: Japan's Noda Government Passes 200% Tax Increase - Look For Noda to Be Out by July, September at the Latest. Either way, if my guess is correct, Noda will hit the 20% area in late June or early July. Then it's curtains for his administration. If he can survive until September it will be a miracle.

But that's not the whole story here folks. We're not talking about getting rid of another prime minister.... Actually, it won't matter who prime minister is. Japan's political situation is much like the United States: There is no one who even has the hope of repairing the situation. At least the USA has Ron Paul. In Japan, we have no one.  

We're talking about several factors combined to make a political situation that cannot be fixed. The whole story involves the bleak future this country is heading for. Raising taxes will not remedy our debt burden. I've mentioned before that we need massive cuts in government spending - cuts which we will never receive.. Throw on top of this the energy situation in Japan and how that will lead to absolute disaster on our horizon.

Folks, this summer could be the beginning of the end for Japan as a modern day economic powerhouse. I do not make this statement lightly. Like I said, read on and see what conclusions you come to...

Japan has no natural resources and energy. We are on a course to shutdown all of our nuclear power plants this summer. Great! You say? Really? How great will it be when industry finds that it is no longer economical to do business and run their factories and plants in Japan? What's going to happen to your rosy life and happy existence when the Japanese economy hollows out and industry leaves for greener pastures in other countries?

People are going to criticize me for writing this and saying that I am hysterical but all I can say is that I have seen this happen with my own eyes in another country before. It happened in my country. The causes of the hollowing out of the economy were different, but the end result was the same: In the United States, industry left for better shores in the 1980s (they all went to China and India) and we are seeing the results of that today... 

All one needs to do to see what that hollowing out has done to the middle class in America is to get on an airplane and fly to, say, Detroit to see what is left of industry there. It's not rocket science, but where's there's no industry, there are no jobs.

That is the future we are heading for in this country and I see no way out. Zerohedge writes in: A New Beginning in Japan: Glimmers of False Hope:

TEPCO, the bailed out owner of the Fukushima nuclear power plant, is trying to shove rate increases of 17% down the throats of its commercial customers—while rationing power at the same time. Power shortages will spread across most of Japan this summer as the last of 54 nuclear power plants will be taken off line in a few weeks. While pressure is building to restart some of them, public distrust and resistance run high, particularly after revelations seeped out about the nuclear industry’s controlling relationship with its regulators. Japan Inc. at work. The conspiracy had squashed stiffer regulations for nuclear emergencies. Five years later, the people of Fukushima paid the price. For that fiasco, the emails that documented it, its deadly and ongoing impact, and the anger it caused, read... A Revolt, the Quiet Japanese Way.

But it’s a two-edged sword. Shortages of up to 20% this summer are expected to strangle the highly industrialized Osaka area, and companies are shifting production overseas. Now a panel of the Osaka municipal and prefectural governments floated a plan for the city of Osaka to demand that Kansai Electric Power shut down its nuclear power plants permanently. Mayor Toru Hashimoto has come out in support.

Catch that part about a 17% rate increase for commercial customers? Are these people nuts? Japan Inc. is losing money left and right as it it without a massive increase in costs. Please refer to Times of India Sony, Panasonic forecast deeper losses:

Japan's biggest makers of phones, televisions and chips say they'll lose about $17 billion this year, about three-quarters of what Samsung Electronics Co will spend on research to lengthen the lead over its competitors.
Sony Corp more than doubled its annual loss forecast for the year ending March 31 as it announced a new chief executive officer, while Panasonic Corp and Sharp Corp predicted the worst losses in their histories. Their combined losses compare with the $22 billion that Samsung, Asia's largest consumer- electronics company, said it will invest in capital expenditures.
These two Japanese giants are going to lose nearly what one Korea competitor will spend on R&D? Folks, it doesn't take a genius to figure out what's going to happen to these entities when they are hit with a 17% increase in costs; two things. One, they will make you pay for those costs and; two, they will move factories overseas where it is cheaper to operate.

I am a bit surprised at Osaka mayor Hashimoto supporting an idea that's going to wind up putting a large part of his constituency in the unemployment line. I thought he wasn't too interested in populism.... Guess I was wrong.

I think he'll be singing a different tune around autumn of this year. In fact, I predict that he'll be changing his mind real quick and getting off his populist duff when people are out of work. Funny that. Politicians seem to want to talk about jobs and getting people back to work is usually a very populist issue when everyone is broke... Testosterone Pit reports in A Revolt, the Quiet Japanese Way:

...people are opposing the almighty nuclear industry at a local level. Every time a nuclear power plant shuts down for scheduled maintenance, people in the area come out against restarting it. Thus, of Japan’s 54 reactors, only two are still generating electricity. And both are scheduled to be off line by April. With harsh consequences for industry and manufacturers.
And another setback for Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda, the sixth ineffectual prime minister in six years. Like his predecessors, he is stumbling down a steep slope in approval ratings. When they drop into the low twenties, he will be axed, and a new sacrificial lamb will be stuffed into that slot. For the fiasco that is sending Noda to replacement hell while the economic and fiscal fundamentals are falling apart, read.... Unpopularity Contest at the Edge of the Abyss.
Under pressure from Japan Inc., Noda suggested that some of the reactors should be restarted. And the arm-twisting with the resisting public got a little tougher on Friday, when METI Minister Yukio Edano predicted that Japan would face a power shortage this summer of 9.3%. Last summer, power shortages were largely limited to the Tokyo area and northwestern Japan. This summer, they would hit Kansai, the huge and highly industrialized Osaka area, where shortfalls could peak at 20%.
Industry and households would have to cut back drastically—a Third-World problem that will send more manufacturers overseas. 

It seems to me that there are no good options at this point for Japan. The people are so against nuclear power that they might be able to close the nuke plants for a while, maybe even permanently. I figure that's going to be one of those good examples of "Be careful for what you wish for, you just might get it."

Japan's financial and energy situation is a wreck... It's not even a slow motion train-wreck anymore... If Japan can make it to the New Year (2013) without some sort of devastating financial chaos, it would be a total and complete miracle.... I don't think that can happen.


Even if Clark Kent were the next Japanese prime minister, he couldn't fix this mess.

9 comments:

  1. Hi Mike,

    I dread the thought of living in a highrise, working in an office complex, ot travelling via mass transit, if a series of blackouts occur.

    What can the average person in Japan do?

    ReplyDelete
  2. Mr. Nobody,
    I was in Isehara in Kanagawa last year when the rolling blackouts occurred. Before they happened, loud speakers would blurt out the news early in the morning. It was weird like something you'd see on a science fiction movie... Then the blackout came and people had no power for up to six hours straight... A very eerie situation...

    ReplyDelete
  3. Kyle Bass was on the Nikkei at the end of January:

    http://www.nikkei.com/news/headline/article/g=96958A9C93819488E0E4E2E0E68DE0E4E2E3E0E2E3E099E3E3E2E2E2?n_cid=DSGGL001

    ReplyDelete
  4. Remember the 1980s/1990s when people were Americans were scared of Japanese companies buying up the world? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ydD5miSPZAs

    Now, thanks to the state, you have blackouts in 21st Century Japan.

    Things are so bad, China may end up with the first practical thorium reactor . That is nuts!

    (More on LFTR/thorium power plants.)

    ReplyDelete
  5. I was thinking about your blog and some of the conversations in it while reading these sensational articles:

    "... The Mainichi Daily News reports: ... The worse-case scenario drawn up by the government includes not only the collapse of the No. 4 reactor pool, but the disintegration of spent fuel rods from all the plant’s other reactors. If this were to happen, residents in the Tokyo metropolitan area would be forced to evacuate." ...

    http://www.shtfplan.com/headline-news/its-not-over-government-plans-for-the-worst-forced-evacuation-of-tokyo_04032012

    "... Radiation from the Fukushima Nuclear Plant disaster in Japan is now actively in the ecosystem all along the North American west coast… even the sea weed is now radiated. The Vancouver Sun reported one year ago that the seaweed tested from waters off the coast of British Columbia were 4 times the amount considered safe. ...

    How can we protect ourselves? First, be aware of what items are likely to be highly tainted.

    1.) SEAFOOD: Question the origin of ALL seafood. Fish and crustaceans from the Pacific Ocean should all be considered to be poisoned with radiation." ...

    http://www.shtfplan.com/headline-news/the-radiation-warnings-you-wont-get-from-the-mainstream-propaganda-machine_04022012

    That might affect exports some?

    Just some of the things, among others, which might get in the way of those planning on getting loans to buy currencies or commodities and such? YMMV.

    - clark

    ReplyDelete
  6. A "massive crash" in China likely won't help Japan either.

    http://www.economicpolicyjournal.com/2012/04/nouriel-roubini-is-getting-that-chinas.html

    - clark

    ReplyDelete
  7. Seems Marc Faber isn't on the bandwagon.
    I wonder what the disconnect is and why he's so bullish on Japan?
    Money printing cures all ills, until it doesn't?

    03 April, 2012
    "Japan May Outperform All Other Markets
    I believe that the Japanese market may outperform all the other markets against all expectations in 2012. - in Bloomberg"

    http://marcfaberblog.blogspot.com/2012/04/japan-may-outperform-all-other-markets.html

    - clark

    ReplyDelete
  8. Now that this is an old blog thread and I hopefully won't cause the host any undue embarrassment and such.

    One other thing I feel compelled to add.
    This is the second blog thread I've been on which has mentioned Clark Kent in this manner.
    As if it matters or has any relation, for the record, the genesis of my nic is Clark W. Griswold. For a number of reasons.
    How-freaking-ever; I - like Clark W. - keep finding myself in situations which are not altogether unlike many episodes I've read of Clark Kent, i.e. defending the weak, defending liberty, etc... Only that Clark W. was a bit socialistic for my taste. wHAt can i say? I picked the nic long before I knew Rothbard.

    I get the feeling from many it's a lost cause in many ways.
    It may very well be, i.e. the bug searching for the windshield, Bacon's rebellion etc...
    But no one can ever say I didn't try.
    "When it hits the fan, don't say we didn't warn you."

    I guess God opens some eyes, and not others?
    Some may scoff and say there is no God.
    I don't get that, it's as if a carpenter can walk out of a newly constructed house and proclaim there is no proof of carpenters.

    QWe are the proof.

    I feel like I'v said my peace.

    So maybe now I'll throttle back some (back into that quite mode I tried before?) either People get it, or they think the sky is always as it is now?

    The more things change,
    the more they stay the same.

    I like writing, but I'm a terrible writer.
    All I know is, I *can* correctly use the word chemtrails in a sentence. It is like a fist of evil encircling the globe.

    No way did I ever think the fun and games of the 1999 internet would end up like this,... with what I know now,... wow:

    http://foundingfather1776.wordpress.com/2011/10/01/what-the-hell-are-they-spraying-on-us-part-8/

    - clark

    ReplyDelete
  9. Look at the Nikkei today in January 2014! Down 350 points, yesterday 250 points the day before that not good. Japan is toast. Sad for the old people there. The young are trying to get out.

    ReplyDelete

Comments must be succinct & relevant to the story. Comments are checked frequently and abusive, rude or profane comments will be deleted. I’m just one of many bloggers who answer questions online and sometimes for the press. I usually handle questions about Japan, marketing or the economy, so in those areas I’m more likely to make sense and less likely to say something really stupid. If I post something here that you find helpful or interesting, that’s wonderful. This is my personal blog. If you don't like what you have read here then, just like when you go into a restaurant or bar that allows smoking, if you don't like it, there's something at the front that has hinges on it and it is called a "door."