INCREDIBLY SCARY: Japan’s debt crisis.
The following link (Telegraph) is one of the better pieces I’ve read lately.
As you may know, historically, economists/financiers seem to have held the view that although Japan had horrific government debt relative to the size of its economy (GDP), this was ‘OK’ since it was all lent by Japanese citizens (because of the high savings ratio). This meant the debt could be easily be repaid at any time by inflation, i.e. printing new money to pay back old debt.
Unfortunately, the debt was never repaid, it just grew and grew. It proved hard to generate inflation, and now all those people who provided the government with money via savings, are getting old, and they want to spend their savings.
So the Japanese government is trying to roll over some 250% of GDP into foreign borrowing instead of domestic borrowing at the worst possible time (i.e. when every other government and business in the world desperately wants to borrow money too).
This should be interesting to watch.
(Britain is in a slightly similar situation, though with a growing population, lots of recently acquired debt, and a negative savings ratio which has now recently turned positive).
Posted: November 2nd, 2009 under Asia, Finance & Economics, Taiwan, UK.
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