Japan Chapter 4. The Character and Structure of the Economy
Family crest with a flying phoenix (ho'o),
the bird of immortality
THE JAPANESE ECONOMY entered the 1990s in excellent
shape. Japan
had the world's second largest gross national product
(GNP--see Glossary),
after the United States, throughout the 1970s
and ranked
first among major industrial nations in 1990 in per capita
GNP at
US$23,801, up sharply from US$9,068 in 1980. After a mild
economic
slump in the mid-1980s, Japan's economy began a period of
expansion
in 1986 that continued until it again entered a
recessionary period
in 1992. Economic growth averaging 5 percent between 1987
and 1989
revived industries, such as steel and construction, which
had been
relatively dormant in the mid-1980s, and brought record
salaries
and employment. In 1992, however, Japan's real GNP growth
slowed to
1.7 percent. Even industries such as automobiles and
electronics
that had experienced phenomenal growth in the 1980s
entered a
recessionary period in 1992. The domestic market for
Japanese
automobiles shrank at the same time that Japan's share of
the
United States market declined. Foreign and domestic demand
for
Japanese electronics also declined, and Japan seemed on
the way to
losing its leadership in the world semiconductor market to
the
United States.
Unlike the economic booms of the 1960s and 1970s, when
increasing exports played the key role in economic
expansion,
domestic demand propelled the Japanese economy in the late
1980s.
This development involved fundamental economic
restructuring,
moving from dependence on exports to reliance on domestic
demand.
The boom that started in 1986 was generated by the
decisions of
companies to increase private plant and equipment spending
and of
consumers to go on a buying spree. Japan's imports grew at
a faster
rate than exports. Japanese postwar technological research
was
carried out for the sake of economic growth rather than
military
development. The growth in high-technology industries in
the 1980s
resulted from heightened domestic demand for
high-technology
products and for higher living, housing, and environmental
standards; better health, medical, and welfare
opportunities;
better leisure-time facilities; and improved ways to
accommodate a
rapidly aging society. This reliance on domestic
consumption also
became a handicap as consumption grew by only 2.2 percent
in 1991
and at the same rate again in 1992.
During the 1980s, the Japanese economy shifted its
emphasis
away from primary and secondary activities (notably
agriculture,
manufacturing, and mining) to processing, with
telecommunications
and computers becoming increasingly vital. Information
became an
important resource and product, central to wealth and
power. The
rise of an information-based economy was led by major
research in
highly sophisticated technology, such as advanced
computers. The
selling and use of information became very beneficial to
the
economy. Tokyo became a major financial center, home of
some of the
world's major banks, financial firms, insurance companies,
and the
world's largest stock exchange, the Tokyo Securities and
Stock
Exchange. Even here, however, the recession took its toll.
The
Nikkei stock average began 1992 at 23,000 and fell to
14,000 in
mid-August before leveling off at 17,000 by the end of
1992.
Data as of January 1994
|