Eurozone bears similarities with Japan in the mid-1990s
FRANKFURT: Europe’s sclerotic growth and political dysfunction inspire frequent comparisons with Japan’s lost decade from the mid-1990s. It’s not there yet.
Monday, 8 Apr 2019
The region’s bout of misery this year – Germany’s industrial slump and the struggle to fix its banks, Italy’s inability to reform, the apparent defeat of central bankers seeking to wean the eurozone off stimulus – may seem to make perpetual malaise look inevitable.
The eurozone’s economy is similar in important ways to its Asian counterpart two decades ago: Interest rates at or below zero, the mountains of debt and non-performing loans, populations transitioning from an ageing society to an aged one.
Economists insist there are limits to the comparison, though, while acknowledging that a prolonged period of European stasis, deflation and central bank impotence remains a threat.“I’m very worried about it,” said Adam Posen, president of the Peterson Institute for International Economics, whose areas of expertise include both Japan and Germany. “Europe’s Japanification is a real risk.”
Japan’s so-called lost decade, triggered by the bursting of a bubble in stocks and real estate, pushed the economy into anaemic growth or none at all, with rising unemployment and falling interest rates.Here are some of the ways Europe is heading in that direction – and some of the ways it isn’t.
Dwindling workforce
The eurozone’s working-age population has decreased as people live longer and have fewer children. Overall population growth is set to peak in 2045, according to Eurostat, so the region is well on track to match Japan. There, the population has fallen for the last seven years; one in three people is now age 60 or older.
Ageing populations are often thought to weaken inflation pressures, as people save for retirement and spend less per capita.
Japan’s demographic squeeze has brought more women and old people into work and pushed the overall unemployment rate to 2.3%, near the lowest level in more than two decades. Yet wage growth is tepid, insufficient to spur inflation.
In the eurozone, on the other hand, unemployment is still above its pre-crisis low, yet workers’ pay has started to improve, a signal ECB officials frequently cite as evidence that price growth will pick up.
Monetary policy
The Bank of Japan (BoJ) has battled deflation for much of the last two decades. The European Central Bank (ECB) got a taste of that struggle in 2009 amid a recession and in the aftermath of the eurozone’s sovereign debt crisis. While Japan’s woes began abruptly at the start of the 1990s, the eurozone slid more gently into weak inflation and growth.
The BoJ was the first major central bank to embrace radical monetary policy, yet it’s still locked into negative interest rates and asset purchases, and weighing more easing. The ECB is a long way from raising rates. While it may be unable to adopt more BoJ-like measures if the slowdown worsens, the bank could be locked into its current stance for a while.
“By refusing to ease policy appropriately, the BoJ created a situation where the country had to stay with near-zero interest rates for 20 years,” said Athanasios Orphanides, a former ECB policy maker. “If you look at it like that, 2020 or 2021 might become completely impossible for the ECB to hike.”
Inflation expectations
While inflation in the eurozone has picked up, it’s still below the ECB’s goal of just under 2%, and the core rate is stuck around 1%.
The ECB says the risk that markets anticipate even slower inflation is “very low”. Investors are less sanguine: A gauge based on derivatives prices has plunged to 1.3%, the lowest level since 2016 – when the ECB was buying bonds at a rate of 80 billion euros (US$90bil) a month.
Debt and yields
Japan’s debt-to-GDP ratio is now above 230%, and rising as deficits pile up. European Union rules impose fiscal limits that will limit such a buildup. The eurozone’s ratio is 89% and is forecast to decline slowly, though a weaker economy and the need for fiscal stimulus could hamper progress.
Still, bond yields tell a worrying story: German borrowing costs are converging with those of Japan.
“Japan and the eurozone are not that dissimilar,” said Andrew Bosomworth, a money manager at Pacific Investment Management Co. “We’re just following in their footsteps.”
Migration
The eurozone’s more dynamic labour market, with both external and internal migration, is a key caveat to comparisons with Japan.
Net inflows of migrants peaked in 2015 as a recovering European economy coincided with instability in North Africa and the Middle East. That helped soften declines in the working-age population. More recently, however, Europeans have grown resistant to large-scale immigration. Annual net inflows into the euro area will decrease in the coming decades, according to Eurostat.
Japan, with 126 million people, has only about 1.3 million foreign workers and remains opposed to a formal immigration policy. The government is likely to issue five-year residency permits to as many as 345,000 low-skilled workers over the next five years. That would plug about one-quarter of the predicted labour shortfall. — Bloomberg