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Japan Intervenes to Bail Out America.com By Peter Schiff (527 hits)

This week, after the Japanese yen had surged to a fifteen-year high against the US dollar, the Japanese government decided to intervene in the foreign exchange market. To great fanfare, the Bank of Japan initiated a vigorous campaign to buy US dollars, thereby stemming the rise of the yen and pulling up the greenback. The effects were immediate, with the yen falling an astonishing 3% on the day of the announcement. At a time when American politicians are growing increasingly vocal about China's currency manipulations, Washington was strangely silent on the Japanese move. This was completely overlooked by the hawkeyed media.

While missing this blatant irony, the media spin doctors cast the Japanese decision as an attempt by the island state to prop up its own fragile economy. More accurately, the intervention was done to help American consumers buy more cars and electronics from Japan. In truth, although more American purchases would nominally benefit some Japanese exporters, a weaker currency is a detriment to the overall Japanese economy.

The politics of currency intervention are actually quite simple. Japan's economy is dominated by large manufacturers that export lots of goods to Americans. The problem is that Americans can't really afford to buy in the quantities that they did just a few years ago. So, instead of looking for new customers with more money to spend, either in their own country or in other productive economies, Japanese manufacturers use their political clout to lobby their government to bailout their traditional U.S. customers. The bailout takes the form of a direct transfer of purchasing power from Japanese savers to American consumers, so that Americans can continue buying products they couldn't otherwise afford. In short, pushing up the dollar allows Japanese exporters to postpone a necessary, but costly, restructuring.

The tendency for governments to sacrifice the needs of the general population in favor of entrenched corporate interests is not unique to Japan. In the United States, we have taken similar measures on behalf of our dominant industries. However, instead of manufacturers and exporters, whose political clout has waned along with their economic prospects, Washington has moved to protect the profits of the financial, retail, and real estate industries -- the true heavyweights of the American corporate world. These industries profit when Americans borrow money to buy things they can't afford. To keep this behavior going, the government must make it possible for consumers to take on more debt; but, in so doing, these policies have left us with an ailing economy in need of deep and drastic restructuring.

In a way, what the Japanese government is doing for American consumers is very similar to what our government is doing for American homebuyers. Rather than let home prices fall, the US government subsidizes homebuyers so they can continue overpaying for houses they cannot actually afford. The beneficiaries of these moves are those selling, building, and financing overpriced homes. Unfortunately, the last thing we need as a nation is to build, buy, or finance more homes. Our economy would improve if the resources devoted to the real estate market could be devoted to other, more needed industries.

Japan should allow the dollar to fall, which would force their manufacturers to adapt to a changing global market where Americans consume less, and those in emerging markets consume more. Instead, it is vainly trying to preserve the status quo and appease entrenched political factions.

Just like here in the US, Japanese politicians take cover by falsely claiming that the intervention "saves jobs." However, the jobs that are saved come at the expense of more productive jobs that are either lost or not created. If Americans cannot afford to buy Japanese products, it makes no sense for the Japanese to continue selling them to us. Rather they should devote their time, effort, savings and resources to selling products to customers who can actually afford to pay.

Japan's bailout of American consumers is nothing more than international vendor financing. This is the same technique used by telecom companies during the Internet boom of the late ‘90s. In order to pump up short-term profits, manufacturers of communications gear loaned money to cash-strapped Internet startups so they could buy switches and routers. Of course, when the dot-coms went bankrupt, all those phony sales were written off; then, the stocks of those companies doing the financing, like Cisco, Lucent, and Nortel, collapsed as well (though they did not collapse to zero like the dot-com companies). Although their performance would have lagged during the boom, the equipment manufactures would have been in far better shape fundamentally if the phony sales had never been made.

The same fate awaits the US and Japan. In this analogy, Japan is Cisco and the United States is Pets.com. Sooner rather than later, both Japan and China will realize that they have been hoodwinked by a fast-talking sock puppet without a credible plan to pay them back. When that happens, they will take the write down and let us fend for ourselves.


Copyright © 2010 Euro Pacific Capital

http://www.campaignforliberty.com/article....
Posted By: Adam Fate
Monday, September 20th 2010 at 1:26PM
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Or further occupation.
Monday, September 20th 2010 at 3:34PM
Thomasena Martin-Johnson
[ ...the true heavyweights of the American corporate world. These industries profit when Americans borrow money to buy things they can't afford. To keep this behavior going, the government must make it possible for consumers to take on more debt;]

So true this is... America has enslaved its citizens into a false American Dream. I'm telling you that in other nations, there isn't this type of enslavement. People when they build homes, there are no mortgage payments. They typically pay for electricity. People don't have such pressure like we have here in the States. Its really ridiculous when if we sit down and really think about it.

I really can't blame the Japanese for bailing out American consumers afterall the Japaneses govt. is only following in the footsteps of what they have seen our own govt. do here in America to its citizens... give people mortgages and homes they could not afford.
Tuesday, September 21st 2010 at 12:46AM
Jen Fad
[THE STUDENTS IN JAPAN ARE GUARENTEED A JOB...THE COMPANY PROVIDES PLACES TO LIFE FOR THEIR WORKERS...NOW WHAT WAS THAT WE WERE SAYING ABOUT JAPAN... ]

Say what?! Why am I stll in N. America again?


Wednesday, September 22nd 2010 at 2:57PM
Jen Fad
Clark,
I agree with you 100%.
Thursday, September 23rd 2010 at 3:20PM
Thomasena Martin-Johnson
Clark,

Look for grants. Also, look for money among the professionals who are in the field she wishes to enter. Try Coka Cola, and Pepsi. They tend to help minority students. Also check with the board of Regents of the college she plans to attend.
Thursday, September 23rd 2010 at 4:09PM
Thomasena Martin-Johnson
Myself, I went to the local state college. I worked my way through school, with a little help from my family. I lived at home, didn't pay the dorm costs. Came out with no financial liabilities at all. There is too much emphasis on the private school's reputation. Use the local community college and state college system. A degree matters much more than where it comes from. And though students think it is fun to be away from home, living on campus, this doesn't contribute to their education.. Hell, I made a career in Software Engineering, though my degree is in liberal arts. Never took a Comp Sci class in my life. For the last year and a half I worked full time, had a new family, and still came out of school in just over four years, with no loans to pay off.
Thursday, September 23rd 2010 at 4:42PM
Adam Fate
brother clark
got that knowledge !
Thursday, September 23rd 2010 at 9:08PM
DAVID JOHNSON
...OOPS ALL MOST LEFT OUT WHEN WE TALK ABOUT 'FAILING STUDENTS IN AMERICAN SCHOOL" YOU CAN JUST GO RIGHT OVER THE JAPANES / JAPANESE-AMERICAN STUDENTS. (SMILE)
Thursday, April 10th 2014 at 6:47PM
ROBINSON IRMA
pLUS WHO IS WILLING TO BET WITH ME THAT JAPAN MAKES MORE CARS IN AMERICA TAHN THE AMERICAN CAR MAKERS MAKE IN AMERICA AND WE DRIVE MORE OF THEIR CARS THAN AMERICAN CARMAKERS CARS. LOL (SMILE)
Thursday, April 10th 2014 at 6:47PM
ROBINSON IRMA
THE STUDENTS IN JAPAN ARE GUARENTEED A JOB...THE COMPANY PROVIDES PLACES TO LIFE FOR THEIR WORKERS...NOW WHAT WAS THAT WE WERE SAYING ABOUT JAPAN...

I REMEMBER ONE OF MY JAPANESE FRIENDS TELLING ME OF HOW SHE WENT BACK AFTER MANY YEARS I AMERICA TO JAPAN WHERE SHE HAD BEEN BORN AND RAISED...SHE SAID THAT SHE WAS WAITING AT THE TRAIN STATION AND STARTED TO GET REAL SICK...IT WAS A WHILE WHILE IN JAPAN THAT SHE REALIZED WHY SHE HAD GOTTEN SICK...

SHE WHILE LIVING IN AMERICA HAD ROOM TO MOVE AROUND IN AND IN JAPAN YOU ARE LIKE BEING PACKED IN A SARDINE CAN...

OH, AND BY THE WAY IF ARIZONA GETS ITS WAY WE WILL BE PAYING WHAT THE PEOPLE IN JAPAN PAY FOR A FRESH ORANGE FROM $4.OO TO $5.OO A PIECE. (SMILE)
Thursday, April 10th 2014 at 6:47PM
ROBINSON IRMA
@jen, too bad that you were in the part of N.A. that missed a few months ago how desperate somay of the Japanese were in relationships to the jobs there being down sized...because downsizing means loss o fhomes some have liven in for generations because theyhave a tradition maybe it has to do with this contry being family orientated for REAL that the jobs go fromone generation to the next along with the homes. (smile)

oh and altough the Japanese have to pay tutionin America they still set theAmerican education GPA. lol (smile)jBut then they do have to pass an education test to evenget into kindergarden...education along with family values is real and alive in Japan. (smile)

now where we on theissue of being in N.A. (otfl) (smile)
Thursday, April 10th 2014 at 6:47PM
ROBINSON IRMA
@Clark, a few years ago students herein Ca. banned together with some who were stillin college and some who had already graduated years before...I know this first hand because I was sent papers to join the class action law suit (an my thanks to our presend president for helping toput an end to this practice and us being able to learn how actual deans and some agencys of colleges, ect were in on this)...back to the class action law suits...

A LOT OF THESE STUDENTS HAVE THE CONTRACT SIGNED SAYING THE FIRST PAYMENT IS DUE 6 MONTHS AFTER GRADUATION...BUT THE LOANS WOULD COME DUE WHILE SOME WERE STILL FULL TIME STUDENTS...IF PRESSED BY THE STUDENT ON THIS THELOANS WOULD JUST BE SOLD TO ANOTHER LOAN COMPANY AND I SUME CASES YOU COULD END UPIN CREDIT DEFAULT...WHICH IS LIKE TRYING TO GET ONE'S REAL IDENTITY BACK...

I AM SO GLAD THAT SOME OF THESE CREDIT CARDS PRACTICES ON COLLEGE CAMPUS HAVE BEEN BANNED OR ARE MORE CLOSELY MONITORED.

(SMILE)
Thursday, April 10th 2014 at 6:47PM
ROBINSON IRMA
...OOPS LIKE TRYING TO GET YOUR 'STOLEN' IDENTITY BACK...(NUP)
Thursday, April 10th 2014 at 6:47PM
ROBINSON IRMA
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