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- <text id=93TT2069>
- <title>
- Aug. 02, 1993: You Call This Change?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Aug. 02, 1993 Big Shots:America's Kids and Their Guns
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- JAPAN, Page 40
- You Call This Change?
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Elections bring political turmoil at home but promise no bold
- new course for Japan Inc.
- </p>
- <p>By BRUCE W. NELAN--With reporting by Edward W. Desmond/Tokyo and Jay Peterzell/Washington
- </p>
- <p> "Mr. Miyazawa is a Class C war criminal," said Seiichi Ota,
- a young member of the Liberal Democratic Party, in a coldly
- measured tone. Frowns of consternation crossed the faces of
- the party Old Guard at the head of the table. "The public detests
- the look and smell of the L.D.P.!" warned Jinen Nagase, a party
- man from western Japan. Defying the tradition that youth must
- respect age, junior members of Japan's long-ruling party turned
- last week's postmortem session about the historic loss at the
- polls into a brawl of nasty taunts and fraying tempers. It was
- time, they demanded, for the discredited elders to hand over
- power to the young.
- </p>
- <p> It was all very un-Japanese, the climax of an election week
- that had tipped the natural order of things upside down. The
- arrogant old conservatives of the L.D.P. lost the majority they
- had used to run the government unchallenged--and almost unsupervised--for 38 years. At the same time, the permanent and futile
- opposition, the Marxist-oriented Social Democrats, lost almost
- half their seats and slid further toward irrelevance. Both parties
- suffered their worst electoral showing ever.
- </p>
- <p> But Japan's domestic revolution does not translate directly
- into change where the rest of the world is concerned. Rearranging
- seats in the lower house of the Diet will lead only slowly,
- if at all, to new directions in the country's economic policies
- and social priorities. "I will believe in this talk of reform,"
- says Makoto Sakata, a prominent Tokyo business writer, "when
- parties take up really fundamental issues like karoshi ((death
- from overwork)) and unpaid overtime."
- </p>
- <p> Similar skepticism prevails in Washington, where Administration
- after Administration has pleaded, demanded and negotiated for
- freer entry into Japanese markets and a reduction of Tokyo's
- trade surplus--$49 billion in 1992. Reflecting on those battles,
- most U.S. experts advise caution in appraising last week's election,
- even if it did downsize the Liberal Democrats, with 223 seats,
- into the largest minority party in the 511-seat Diet. What the
- election results suggest, says former Assistant Secretary of
- State William Clark, is "a voting public that is unhappy with
- the leadership of the L.D.P., but not necessarily with its policies."
- </p>
- <p> When President Clinton visited Tokyo last month, he repeatedly
- implied that "change" could bring Japan smoother trading relations
- with the world, a more consumer-oriented society, a government
- concerned with its citizens' quality of life. U.S. officials
- have been pushing Japan to cut taxes and spend more government
- money to boost the sluggish economy and increase imports from
- the U.S. Even though the election results demonstrate an impulse
- toward change, says a senior Administration official, "we should
- not presuppose it is the kind of change that we think ought
- to happen."
- </p>
- <p> There are good reasons for Washington to be circumspect. The
- Diet actually has more conservatives now than it had after the
- 1990 election. While the Liberal Democrats have lost 52 seats
- since then, most of them belonged to defectors who resigned
- over the series of gigantic corruption scandals that led to
- the government's downfall in June. The rebels formed two new
- conservative parties that won almost every seat they campaigned
- for. These parties call themselves reformist and advocate clean
- government, but they are still unlikely to shatter the "iron
- triangle" of partnership among politicians, bureaucrats and
- big businessmen who control Japan Inc. and make it so profitable.
- </p>
- <p> Now that Prime Minister Kiichi Miya zawa has reluctantly bowed
- out, eight parties are trying to elbow their way into a new
- governing coalition. Whatever their maneuvering produces by
- the Aug. 16 deadline, it will have to be either a coalition
- led by a chastened, more tentative L.D.P. or an alliance of
- the inexperienced newcomer parties. Either way, that government
- is likely to be too weak to force through new economic policies
- or trim the regulations that keep out foreign competition--even if it wants to.
- </p>
- <p> Many experts believe the incoming government will provide no
- more than a bridge to another election in a few months. If so,
- the contending parties will not be eager to push for major changes
- that might alienate voters. Allowing imports of cheaper foreign
- rice, for example, would antagonize farmers, and reforming election-finance
- laws could disrupt the patronage system.
- </p>
- <p> In these uncertain times, and even in more settled ones, control
- of policy goes by default to the bureaucrats in Tokyo's government
- ministries, who derive much of their power from enforcing complicated
- rules. The deadlock, says Takashi Sasaki, a professor of politics
- at the University of Tokyo, may lead to "domination by the bureaucrats
- and mean that no serious decision making will be done."
- </p>
- <p> That prescription could apply to the trade talks with the U.S.
- that are expected to resume in September. Japan's negotiators
- seem to be getting ready to whisper "weak government" to their
- American counterparts to explain why, yet again, no progress
- is possible. The U.S. has often prevailed upon heavyweight politicians
- from the L.D.P. to force obstructive bureaucrats to compromise.
- The new political power game means that tactic, at least, will
- undergo change.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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