Japanese Economy recovering after 13 years of slump ?
March 14th, 2010 by , under nnmj.com.
The number of bankruptcies have improved since last year too.
Tokyo stocks open higher
Monday, July 14, 2003 at 12:41 JST
TOKYO — Tokyo stocks rose Monday morning, led by export-oriented technology issues after rises in U.S. equities on Friday.
The 225-issue Nikkei Stock Average rose 38.50 points, or 0.40%, to end the morning at 9,673.85. The broader Tokyo Stock Price Index (TOPIX) of all First Section issues gained 4.10 points, or 0.43%, to 949.88. (Kyodo News)
Bankruptcies in Japan down 9%
Monday, July 14, 2003 at 14:10 JST
TOKYO — The number of corporate bankruptcies in January-June 2003 dropped 9.0% from a year earlier to 8,984, but it was the eighth-highest since the end of World War II for the first half of a year, Teikoku Databank Ltd. said Monday.
It is the first tally below 9,000 in four years for January-June, reflecting corporate efforts to avoid bankruptcy and an improved financing system in the public sector to support struggling businesses, the credit-research agency said. (Kyodo News)
Last, but not least, there is the danger of the so-called “debt trap”, in which rising interest payments swell the government’s budget deficit to such an extent that total debt continues to grow even when the government is not overspending."
Right now Koizumi has balanced the situation... barely. but if he doesn't start consumer spending in Japan, (which the current growth has not done, as most of it is in export sectors). The big problem is with the banking sector where Koizumi has done NOTHING to resolve the banking crisis, as a result we still have Billions in bad loans, which is still sitting on top of a property bubble. The problem is that if the banks start recalling loans, they will have to take the collateral, which in most cases is land. But the land is still overvalued (or was valued before the last property crash), so the banks have to admit that they're land is valueless and the loan is gone, so they have overstate profits. Banks have also gone and started mis-accounting financing, such as counting future tax breaks as profits which is a no no. The Resona bank's near crash last year came close to toppling the market, and Koizumi hasn't done nearly enough to adress the situation. I'm going to stop it there but I could go on for another 30 minutes about how bad the situation really is.
Japan needs to start doing some major reworking in the near future that will have some very tough choices. Petty politics continue in the LDP and yet they are staring into the abyss. Its scary and sad when I saw the platforms of the other candidates going against the Koizumi in the LDP party. All three supported more public sector spending on infrastructure, as petty pork barrel politics. They only worry about getting elected, not the country itself.... Sigh. I guess I won't be moving to Japan anytime soon.
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