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Japan's National Debt Hits Record High
Associated Press via Yahoo ^ | 09/23/2005 | AP via Yahoo

Posted on 09/23/2005 7:28:18 AM PDT by RockinRight

TOKYO - Japan's government debt, already the highest in the industrialized world, rose 1.7 percent to a record high of 795.8 trillion yen ($7.1 trillion) at the end of June, according to a report released by the Finance Ministry. ADVERTISEMENT

The latest figure marked an increase of 14.3 trillion yen from the end of March , the ministry said Thursday. The amount is equivalent to about 6.24 million yen ($55,900) for every Japanese.

Japan has relied on government bond issues to make up for falling tax revenues, turning into one of the world's most indebted countries.

Japan's public debt burden is almost 160 percent of its GDP and already the highest in the industrialized world.

Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi, voted back to office following a landslide win in the Sept. 11 lower house elections, has pledged to improve the country's finances by reining in public spending and creating a smaller government.

A package of bills that would privatize Japan's massive postal service, set to be approved during a special parliamentary session that began Wednesday, has been the cornerstone of Koizumi's reform agenda.

Advisers to the government have also been mulling ways to raise taxes when the nation's economic recovery takes firmer root.


TOPICS: Extended News; Foreign Affairs; Government; Japan; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: fiscalconservatism; japan; nationaldebt
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To: Mase

Tale of Two Debts/Deficits: Japan and the U.S. (October 9, 2006) by Charles Hugh Smith

The not-so-visible difference between Japan’s debt and the U.S. debt is that the Japanese are prodigious savers, and can fund their own debt internally. In other words, as long as the Japanese save 20% of their national income, then their individuals, insurance companies and banks can buy their government’s 34 trillion yen in bonds and cover the annual deficit more or less indefinitely.

But here in the U.S. we are saving -1% —yes, a negative savings rate for the first time since the Great Depression. We don’t generate sufficient savings to fund our own government’s deficits. We rely on foreigners to buy at least half of all outstanding Treasury bonds— over $2 trillion, not counting OPEC money which flows in from London or the Caribbean and thus isn’t counted as central bank ownership.

Bottom line: the Japanese can continue running such staggering deficits because they can fund them with their own savings. The U.S. does not have that luxury. So what happens if for political or financial reasons, foreign investors and central banks stop buying U.S. bonds? Interest rates will have to rise to the point that someone steps up and willingly slaps down their cash for a fixed rate of return from the U.S. Treasury.


21 posted on 09/09/2008 4:19:50 PM PDT by TheJapaneseDream
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