Saturday, April 20, 2013

Learning to Live Within Your Own Skin - Japan's Grand Experiment


The Japanese have become perhaps the greyest of the greying nations of the developed world.   This is discussed in The World Today, the public journal of Chatham House, perhaps the world's most venerable and certainly most prestigious think tank.

Everybody knows that Japan is ground zero for global ageing. The youngest of the developed countries as recently as the mid-1970s, it is now the oldest – and its age wave will continue to roll in for decades to come.

By 2050, the proportion of Japanese who are 65 or older is on track to reach 39 per cent, up from 23 per cent in 2010 and only 9 per cent in 1980, when Japan Inc seemed poised to conquer the global economy. Japan’s total population, which is already contracting, will enter a precipitous decline, shrinking by over a half by the end of the century.

To those of us from economies addicted to the growth model, Japan sounds like a ticking time bomb.

Yet Japan enjoys a number of enviable advantages that may better position it to cope with its ageing population than many western countries – at least for a while.

To begin with, its welfare state is not especially generous. All told, government benefits account for just under 40 per cent of the total income of the average Japanese elder. In most European countries, 50, 60, or even 70 per cent of elderly income arrives in the form of a government cheque.

The relatively low dependence of the elderly on benefits, together with a cultural tradition that stresses consensus and shared sacrifice, makes it easier for Japan to rewrite the social contract than it is for most western countries. 

The Japanese also benefit from their family factor.

Then there is the extended family. In Japan, nearly half of old people live with their grown children. This custom not only allows relatively poor Japanese elders to live with their more affluent children, but allows poor young adults to live with their more affluent parents. Multigenerational living not only mitigates the burden of oldage dependency by providing an extra source of support for the old, but also by providing a source of ‘trickle down’ support for the young. While the rate of multigenerational living remains high in southern Europe, it is less than 15 per cent in most western countries. In the Netherlands it is less than 10 per cent and in Sweden it is less than 5 per cent.

Another solution for the Japanese is to up their birth rates.

If Japan is to prosper in the long run – indeed if Japan is to survive – it must raise its fertility rate. Doing so will require the radical transformation of workplace and family cultures. In today’s rich world, it is no longer true that more working women means fewer babies. In fact just the opposite is true. Those countries that facilitate a dual role for women get more of both crucial inputs – workers and babies. Those that do not, get fewer of both. It is no accident that Japan has both one of the very lowest fertility rates in the OECD and one of the very lowest female labour-force participation rates.

In early January, the United Nations University published an intriguing report, Japan as the New Normal: Living in a Constrained Economy

...conventional wisdom would suggest that after two decades of recessionary tendencies, Japan should be an economic and societal wreck. But quite the opposite is the case. In many respects Japan seems to be doing fine.

The author noted that, from a GDP perspective, Japan's plight looks far worse than it is.   Here we find the new economics, that goes beyond financial capital to include both natural and social capital.

...the findings of the 2012 Inclusive Wealth Report from the International Human Dimensions Programme on Global Environmental Change (IHDP).  Set up as an alternative to gross domestic product (GDP), the Inclusive Wealth Index reflects the state of natural resources, the economy and ecological conditions, the population’s health and productive capacity, and measures whether or not national policies are sustainable.

In the years ahead we are likely also to see more reflection upon what Japan’s transition to the “new normal” might actually look like. And remember, this “new normal” will be the future path for most industrialized and industrializing countries.

But the reality is that the new normal may not be as stark as we might expect. There are some who suggest that Japan has not lost anything at all — echoing the findings of the Inclusive Wealth Report. According to financial journalist Anthony Hilton, “Japanese exports increased by 73 percent during the ‘lost decade’ and electricity usage — a key indicator of economic activity — increased by 30 percent. By 2006, Japan’s exports were three times what they were in 1989. As in The Wizard of Oz, being ‘lost’ might not be so bad after all.”

Over at the New York Times, Eamonn Fingleton argues that in recent decades “Japan has succeeded in delivering an increasingly affluent lifestyle to its people despite the financial crash. In the fullness of time, it is likely that this era will be viewed as an outstanding success story.”

One strong proponent of an alternative viewpoint on how Japan is faring is Junko Edahiro, who set up the Institute of Studies in Happiness, Economy and Society (ISHES) in 2011.  She argues that:  “We live not for economic growth. We live for happiness in our daily lives and we hope generations to come can enjoy their happiness. Economies and societies should do something to serve this purpose and should take on different forms and structures if they fail to meet their goals.”

This begs the question: if we are witnessing the end of economic growth, not only in Japan but globally, what are the new forms and structures of economic and societal behaviour that we should be searching for? Surely some of the answers can be found in Japan. Heinberg perhaps captures this best when he states:

“A few nations and communities are already moving in the direction of a steady-state economy. Sweden, Denmark, Japan, and Germany have arguably reached a situation in which they do not depend on high rates of growth to provide for their people. This is not to say these countries have only smooth sailing ahead (Japan in particular is facing a painful adjustment, given its very high levels of government debt), but they are likely to fare better than other nations that have high domestic levels of economic inequality and that have gotten used to high growth rates.”

Like it or not, the growth paradigm is now dysfunctional.  Nations are gradually moving toward "steady state economics" marked by balance, not growth.   This Wiki summary is fairly apt:

The steady state economy is an entirely physical concept. Any non-physical components of an economy (e.g., knowledge) can grow indefinitely. But the physical components (e.g. supplies of natural resources, human populations, and stocks of human-built capital) are constrained and endogenously given. An economy could reach a steady state after a period of growth or after a period of downsizing or degrowth. The objective is to establish it at a sustainable scale that does not exceed ecological limits.

It is critical to realize that there's nothing radical about this concept of equilibrium.   It doesn't herald totalitarianism or any other form of mass servitude.   Indeed it is the final chapter in the theories of all the world's great economists from Adam Smith to John Stuart Mill to Keynes.

John Stuart Mill, a pioneer of economics and one of the most gifted philosophers and scholars of the 19th century,[8] anticipated the transition from economic growth to a "stationary state." In his magnum opus, Principles of Political Economy, he wrote:
...the increase of wealth is not boundless. The end of growth leads to a stationary state. The stationary state of capital and wealth… would be a very considerable improvement on our present condition.
and
...a stationary condition of capital and population implies no stationary state of human improvement. There would be as much scope as ever for all kinds of mental culture, and moral and social progress; as much room for improving the art of living, and much more likelihood of it being improved, when minds ceased to be engrossed by the art of getting on."[9]
John Maynard Keynes, one of the most influential economists of the twentieth century,[10] also considered the day when society could focus on ends (happiness and wellbeing, for example) rather than means (economic growth and individual pursuit of profit). He wrote:
...that avarice is a vice, that the exaction of usury is a misdemeanour, and the love of money is detestable… We shall once more value ends above means and prefer the good to the useful.[11]
and
The day is not far off when the economic problem will take the back seat where it belongs, and the arena of the heart and the head will be occupied or reoccupied, by our real problems - the problems of life and of human relations, of creation and behavior and religion.[12]

 This is the path that Japan has embarked upon.  Eventually we Canadians too may find merit in living within our own skin.

6 comments:

Lorne said...

Your post is an encouraging look ahead, Mound, for those countries that are able to adapt to a much lower/zero growth future. I recently read Jeff Rubin's book, The End of Growth, which struck me as a realistic, even inevitable projection of what our futures will hold, and he points out that it need not be bleak as so many of our politicians and economists who are addicted to the idea of endless growth would have us believe.

Of course, none of that will sit well with the the people currently in charge of our economies and see material acquisition as the sole basis upon which to evaluate our societies.

The Mound of Sound said...

I think the harder and longer we wrestle against this inevitability the poorer will be the outcome.

Yet research by organizations like the Global Footprint Network shows that we're already running troubling deficits in our natural capital that is manifest, even to the naked eye from space, in such things as desertification and deforestation and the drying out of rivers and reservoirs. The latest satellite altimeters can measure the surface subsidence from the draining of major aquifers. And then there's the collapse of global fisheries, one after another.

We've become dependent on eating our seed corn, preferring to look the other way so as to avoid acknowledging what that portends. This economic sleight of hand can't be maintained forever.

I have read an analysis that Japan might also be the country that leads the developed world away from globalization. That too seems just a matter of time.

As Rubin points out in The End of Growth, globalization depends on an abundance of cheap energy. What he overlooks is that it also depends on nations that are more or less uniformly socially, environmentally and politically stable and it's this very stability, in all its dimensions, that climate change impacts unravel. I think that sort of post-globalization industrial restoration would be great for Canada.

Purple library guy said...

I might suggest that globalization not only depends on cheap energy, but is partly driven by the uneven distribution and physical portability of that energy.
That is, if you have to import oil and coal and natural gas and in turn have to make sure others are exporting those things, in order to run your economy, then in turn you are driven to increase other forms of global trade because foreign exchange is king.

Contrariwise, if everyone ends up generating power largely on a national and even local level, like you get with most sustainables, that generates less push for globalized trade and imperialism.

Purple library guy said...

Actually, that in itself might be one reason so many elements of the existing system seem to feel threatened by renewable energy.

Purple library guy said...

Oooops! Sorry to triple-post, things keep occurring to me a titch too late. Mound, I do disagree with one thing you just said:
"What he overlooks is that it also depends on nations that are more or less uniformly socially, environmentally and politically stable"

Depends which nations you mean, at least. To me, globalization to the contrary depends on third world nations which are more or less socially, environmentally and politically unstable. It's a form of imperialism. It preys on the weak and it works diligently to create weak, unstable nations to prey on. When countries become stronger and more stable, they tend to start refusing to be further globalized. Note the trajectory of much of South America of late years, as contrasted with Africa.

The Mound of Sound said...

Hey, PLG. I find your idea of global energy self-sufficiency reducing the incentives to globalize.

As for the stability issue, that's extremely important for multi-nationals. Dell, for example, relies on suppliers in over a hundred countries to produce materials, components and assemblies for its computers. It's an operation that runs like clockwork. Dell cannot abide instability in any of its partner nations that might disrupt the entire manufacturing chain.

In today's "just in time" manufacturing model the end producer becomes critically dependent on suppliers. Nations that are wracked with instability become unreliable. I don't think Dell will be sourcing any materials or parts from Afghanistan any time soon.

As we've seen from the first bout of the Arab Spring, climate change impacts such as food insecurity, can trigger enormous upheaval and instability. Science tells us we have a lot more of that coming our way. This, I suspect, tears holes in the umbrella of globalization.