Housewives With Frying Pans Protest Japan Tax Hike as Debt Soars

Japanese women during a rally against government plans to raise the consumption tax and its decision to restart the two reactors at the Oi nuclear power plant in Tokyo on June 17, 2012. Photographer: Franck Robichon/EPA/Corbis

Bloomberg News

Housewives With Frying Pans Protest Japan Tax Hike as Debt Soars

By Monami Yui
August 10, 2012

About 200 housewives marched down a shopping street in central Tokyo, beating pans with ladles and shouting slogans criticizing a government plan to double Japan’s 5 percent consumption tax.

“Ordinary people like us have a limited amount of money we can spend each month,” said Natsuyo Makabe, a protester who took part in three demonstrations in June against the tax as well as nuclear energy and a free-trade pact. “Ninety-nine percent of the public will have to cut back on what they buy.”

The apron protesters, as they are known, argue that a tax increase would crimp household budgets just when the economy can’t withstand a drop in consumption, Bloomberg Businessweek reports in its Aug. 13 issue. They say it’s a bad time for Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda to rein in public debt that will be over 230 percent of national output this year, the biggest anywhere. The tax plan has already cleared the lower house of Japan’s parliament, and Noda this week brokered a deal to bring the bill to the upper house today.

Japan’s debt is ballooning as its population is aging and shrinking, meaning there are only 2.4 working-age Japanese to support one senior citizen now, compared with 9.1 in 1965. If he gets this tax issue wrong, Noda could throttle consumption, reduce tax revenue, and still leave Japan deep in debt. If the tax increase is defeated, the debt problem remains unsolved.

Yet Japan’s bonds have never been more popular. The ticking fiscal time bomb is being drowned out by noise from the euro crisis, which has turned Japan into a haven for bond investors. Foreign ownership of Japanese government bonds rose to a record 8.3 percent last year.

Nine-Year Low

Yields on the 10-year benchmark slid half a basis point to 0.795 percent today in Tokyo, after last month falling to 0.72 percent, the lowest since 2003. Only Switzerland pays less to borrow. Yet Japan’s debt comes to about $93,000 per person, compared with about $33,000 in both the U.S. and Greece, according to Bloomberg data.

Japan’s current account surplus means it’s not dependent on foreign investors to soak up its bond issues, according to Genji Tsukatani, portfolio manager at JPMorgan Asset Management Japan. He said Japan is at low risk of default. Takeshi Fujimaki, a former adviser to investor George Soros, disagrees, warning that the local bond market is a bubble that will pop in the next five years. “I wouldn’t be surprised if we see a default happening tomorrow,” he said.

‘Widow Maker’

J. Kyle Bass, founder of hedge fund Hayman Capital Management, has been betting on a collapse in Japan’s bond market since at least 2009. He predicts Japan will start experiencing regular trade deficits as the strong yen drives more Japanese manufacturers abroad.

The trade deficits, along with declining savings, will trigger a rise in yields to the point where the cost of servicing Japan’s debt exceeds government revenue, he said. He acknowledges that other bond investors have nicknamed his short position the “widow-maker” since betting against the Japanese bond market to date has been fruitless.

Cracks are already appearing, however. A surge in energy imports to compensate for nuclear plants idled after last year’s quake gave Japan a record current account deficit in January. JPMorgan expects the shortfall to become chronic by 2015. Barclays thinks the switch will happen in 2018.

The Government Pension Investment Fund oversees 113.6 trillion yen ($1.45 trillion) and is historically one of the biggest buyers of Japanese debt, currently about 63 percent of its assets. Late in July it revealed that pension payouts already exceed revenue as baby boomers turn 65 and qualify for payments. “We need to sell Japanese government bonds to raise cash,” said the fund’s president, Takahiro Mitani. If too many institutions have to sell bonds, yields will rise.

‘No Money’

Noda’s plan would lift the sales tax to 8 percent in 2014 and 10 percent in 2015. The increase would cost a family of four an extra 119,369 yen per year on average, according to the Daiichi Life Research Institute. “We’ll have no money to put into our saving accounts,” said protester Makabe.

The effect of families cutting back will be catastrophic for the economy, said Shinichi Kobuki, who organized the march attended by Makabe. “We’re still in the deflationary slump, our salaries are getting lower, and small businesses are going bankrupt,” he said. “The consequence of the bigger tax burden would be worse than just individual lives getting bitter.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Monami Yui in Tokyo at myui1@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Rocky Swift at rswift5@bloomberg.net

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