My comment: I think this is a lucid and clear anaylisis of what
happens in Japan. As I told I am not expert on Japanese politics at
all, but if one talks to people one can get some clues.

Peace and best wishes.

Xi

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601039&sid=aEDDIHtwjJuI

Sept. 2 (Bloomberg) -- “This is no Obama moment.”

That’s how Robert Ryan, a currency strategist at BNP Paribas SA,
summed up this week’s election triumph by Japanese opposition leader
Yukio Hatoyama.

It’s not about spoiling celebrations over ending the Liberal
Democratic Party’s half-century of almost uninterrupted rule. It’s
just that pundits are comparing Hatoyama to U.S. President Barack
Obama and wondering if Japan is experiencing change it can believe in.
Let’s not get ahead of ourselves.

The Democratic Party of Japan’s victory is a big deal. The proverbial
genie is out of the bottle, and politicians will never be able to
return to their old ways of ignoring constituents. In a sense,
democracy in Japan is no longer a concept, but a reality.

Now the hard part begins. Hatoyama should keep in mind that his party
didn’t win this election, so much as the LDP lost. Any party that
turned to the hapless Taro Aso to slow its demise was doomed,
regardless of what the opposition did. Now, the prime- minister-in-
waiting must rally his disparate troops around some of the most
daunting problems in modern economics.

It won’t be easy, as the DPJ is an amalgam of political refugees from
other parties with divergent ideologies. Hatoyama’s bigger test will
be ending Japan’s economic inertia. Numerous challenges are coming to
a head as the 62-year-old Stanford University Ph.D. takes the reins.
It would be more comforting if Hatoyama had articulated a vision,
Obama-style.

Maddeningly Vague

Love Obama or not, the man detailed a directional shift for the U.S.
and is trying to implement it. Hatoyama’s party has been maddeningly
vague about what it wants to do, how it plans to do it and how it will
pay for any policy shifts.

Will new leadership change Japan? Chats with Japanese investors,
businesspeople, colleagues and neighbors tell me no one really knows
what to expect. So rather than hazard pointless predictions, here is a
look at Hatoyama’s to-do list.

-- Boost the economy. That won’t be easy with the $14.2 trillion U.S.
economy in recession. China’s 7.9 percent growth helps, yet Japan
needs bigger growth engines as deflation returns. Borrowing more will
be difficult with public debt almost twice the size of the economy.
And interest rates are already near zero. The DPJ must think
creatively about how to get more growth out of existing spending.

Shift in Focus

-- Strengthen the safety social net. This really is the key to getting
Japan’s aggressive savers to consume more. Hatoyama wants to invest
more in households than companies, more on education than new roads
and bridges and more on working mothers than inefficient industries.

-- Raise competitiveness: The only way Japan can maintain its high
standard of living is to get more work out of existing workers,
innovating and empowering entrepreneurs to create new companies and
fresh jobs. Tax shifts and a review of corporate start-up policies to
encourage this shift could pay dividends.

-- Prepare for an aging population. Japan has long had a steady supply
of young, well-educated workers to replace retiring ones. The labor
force is taking on a lopsided quality, and the hit to government tax
receipts will be extreme. The DPJ may be forced to tweak third-rail
issues: raising the retirement age, cutting pension benefits and
increasing immigration.

Safety Net

-- Increase the birthrate: Environmentalists have a point when they
say shrinking populations are good for the planet. They can be
disastrous economically. The DPJ must invest more in affordable child
care and education. As distasteful as it may sound, offering families
cash bonuses to procreate is worth considering.

-- Heal wounds in Asia. The DPJ has such an incredible opportunity to
pull the center of Japan’s diplomatic power away from Washington. Yes,
the U.S.-Japan relationship is vital and Hatoyama is more likely to
maintain it than meddle with it. Japan also needs to confirm its
position in the fastest-growing economic region. It’s time to put
World War II firmly behind Japan and allow it to play a bigger role in
its own neighborhood. Job-creating trade deals will follow.

-- Rebalance the economy. The LDP dragged its feet on reducing Japan’s
reliance on exports for many a decade. That won’t be an option for
Hatoyama. The key is to give Japanese people some confidence in the
future so they can spend more, and to narrow the gap between rich and
poor. Part of the issue is finding a better use for Japan’s almost $1
trillion of currency reserves. The DPJ would be wise to move Japan
beyond its obsession with a weak yen.

-- Be bold. If Obama worries me as an American, it’s that he hasn’t
been radical enough in changing an economic system badly in need of
it. Hatoyama should understand the unique mandate with which he has
been presented and wrestle power from the bureaucrats who avoid change
at all cost.

Otherwise, the same tired LDP leaders Hatoyama just pushed from power
will be back in a few years -- and Japan none the richer for it. It’s
a fate he may share with Obama if both don’t become more audacious.

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