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- <text id=93TT1489>
- <title>
- Apr. 19, 1993: Goodbye to the Godzilla Myth
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Apr. 19, 1993 Los Angeles
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- JAPAN, Page 42
- Goodbye to the Godzilla Myth
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>As Miyazawa arrives in the U.S., he leaves a country that is
- anything but an all-devouring juggernaut
- </p>
- <p>By GEORGE J. CHURCH--With reporting by Ann Blackman/Washington
- and Edward W. Desmond and Kumiko Makihara/Tokyo
- </p>
- <p> Something funny happened on Japan's way into the '90s.
- </p>
- <p> The country is stuck in a severe economic slump that after
- three years is at best beginning to bottom out--maybe. Though
- the stock market has turned up, it is still 50% below its peak.
- The banking system is staggering under bad debts, and almost
- every week another big manufacturer announces plans to cut
- production and trim its work force.
- </p>
- <p> The nation is going through political turmoil
- unprecedented in four decades. Corruption in the party that has
- governed since 1955 has become so noxious that some of its most
- popular members are threatening to walk out. The ruling party
- could even lose its majority in the lower house of parliament,
- starting a period of prolonged floundering.
- </p>
- <p> Japan is experiencing social strains--a generation gap,
- a progressive graying of the population, a growing refusal by
- women to accept their traditional roles--that are profoundly
- disconcerting to a country that moves in orderly lockstep. The
- once docile public has become so discontented that in a
- government survey of 10,000 people, 44.3% said the country was
- going in the wrong direction; only 31.4% thought it was on the
- right course.
- </p>
- <p> The era of unrestrained growth and infinite success is
- over. The Japan that is experiencing its most profound
- dislocations since its resurrection from World War II hardly
- looks any longer like the all-devouring Godzilla of Western
- myth. Former French Prime Minister Edith Cresson's publicly
- voiced fear of Japan's "desire to conquer the world" sounds
- off-key, and American workers can stop their bitter jokes about
- how they will all be laboring for Japanese bosses.
- </p>
- <p> To be sure, no one counts Japan out, or even very far
- down. The stumbling economy still stands an outside chance of
- overtaking the U.S. in total production sometime in the next
- decade. Though the Liberal Democratic Party is torn by scandal
- and dissension, no other party or coalition is anywhere near
- strong enough yet to snatch away all its power. What passes for
- social protest in Japan might look like placidity elsewhere. A
- Japanese gripe session is likely to end on the word shoganai
- (roughly: nothing can be done about it). Though rap music has
- come to Japan, the most assertive lyrics decry too much
- monosodium glutamate in Chinese food.
- </p>
- <p> Yet rappers could easily find serious ills to complain
- about. Japan being Japan, outright unemployment during these
- hard times remains a low 2.3%, but that may be misleading. Some
- layoffs have been disguised by the practice of kata tataki, or
- shoulder tapping. A boss tells an employee, We have no work for
- you so you'll have to go--and by the way, this is voluntary,
- right? A 51-year-old executive at a major musical-instrument
- manufacturer claims he was sent to sit alone in the basement
- under half the normal amount of lighting with no work to do
- until he quit. Workers urged to take early retirement, like
- older employees of a plant that Nissan plans to close in Zama,
- are not counted as jobless either.
- </p>
- <p> Overtime and expense accounts have severely been trimmed,
- radically changing the lives of many salarymen. The Ginza in
- Tokyo once sported 4,000 clubs where businessmen passed the late
- hours drinking, eating and chatting with young hostesses.
- Several hundred clubs have been forced to close, and many more
- are up for sale. Yuri Hirota, mama-san at the Club 48, used to
- keep an employee at the phone all night doing nothing but
- summoning hard-to-get taxis. Now cabs can be hailed by stepping
- out the door, but penny-pinching customers prefer to take trains--and since the last ones leave for far-out suburbs around
- midnight, the club is emptying out early.
- </p>
- <p> Not a few salarymen, bereft of overtime and entertainment
- allowances, are having to spend time with wives and children
- they have barely spoken to for years--sometimes to their
- mutual shock. Japanese businessmen are traditionally so lost
- outside their offices and clubs that many a wife refers to a
- retired husband as a "damp leaf"--a sticky annoyance to a
- woman tidying up a walk.
- </p>
- <p> Some Japanese have lost everything: personal and business
- bankruptcies have soared. Shinichi Hoshino is afraid to reveal
- his real name. He has not declared bankruptcy, but that is a
- technicality. After running a bar and a mah-jongg parlor, he
- ventured into real estate in the early 1980s. By 1989 he
- employed 40 people, and that year he sold 100 apartments to
- customers who bought them as investments and tax shelters,
- netting $1.7 million in profits. In retrospect, he says, he
- should have realized that the boom was topping out, but "every
- month the prices continued to go up," and banks were eager to
- keep lending. Hoshino kept on expanding, buying golf memberships
- at prices up to $500,000 for his clients and employees and a
- house--a luxury in apartment-filled Japan--for his family.
- </p>
- <p> Today his properties have been sold at a loss, his
- employees all dismissed and his wife and children moved from the
- suburban house to a small city apartment. His income, earned by
- running a small real estate management firm, has slid from a
- peak of $36,000 a month to $5,600. That is not enough even to
- begin repaying the $5.8 million he owes to a bank and a leasing
- company; he pays a pittance of $450 a month in interest to the
- leasing company, nothing to the bank. Hoshino resignedly says
- "the way things are can't be helped." But he does rail at
- politicians who "just work for their own political party or
- faction, and not for the entire country."
- </p>
- <p> Many Japanese agree: the "money politics" that they
- shrugged off when the country was prosperous seems unbearable
- in hard times. As a result, Shin Kanemaru, the most powerful
- behind-the-scenes manipulator in the Liberal Democratic Party
- during the past decade, could actually serve a jail sentence.
- He was forced to resign his parliamentary seat for accepting $4
- million in illegal political contributions from a trucking
- company. But public fury would not let prosecutors drop the
- case. In March they raided Kanemaru's office and found a safe
- containing $31 million in bonds, $960,000 worth of gold bars and
- $391,000 in cash--all kept secret from tax authorities. He now
- faces trial on a charge of evading $8.8 million in taxes; if
- convicted, he could be imprisoned for five years.
- </p>
- <p> The Kanemaru scandal has shaken the Liberal Democratic
- Party as none before. Some popular younger figures are
- threatening to bolt and form a new party; last week Tsutomu Hata
- even rejected an offer to become Foreign Minister in order to
- maintain his freedom of action. Some analysts think a new party
- might win as many as 40 seats in Diet elections that must be
- held by next February, possibly costing the Liberal Democrats
- their majority.
- </p>
- <p> What then? Nobody knows. It seems unlikely, though, that
- the Liberal Democrats can carry on as an unquestioned force,
- solving all problems with backroom deals among faction leaders.
- Public revulsion has caused even party stalwarts to start
- talking about shaking up the corruption-breeding electoral
- system.
- </p>
- <p> Yet even an imaginative government with strong popular
- support would be hard put to ease some of the new social
- strains. For generations the country has relied on an unspoken
- bargain: citizens would work killing hours and accept
- surprisingly low standards of living--long commutes, cramped
- living space--for the sake of national economic power and
- pride. But now that fanatical work ethic seems to be faltering
- among the young, who have startled their elders by choosing more
- leisure time over higher pay. "They enjoy having barbecues with
- their families," marvels an aging Toyota executive. "My
- generation never even thought of such things."
- </p>
- <p> Japan will need more, not less, labor to cope with its
- declining birthrate and aging population. By 2007, the number
- of Japanese will begin to shrink; in that same year, 20% will
- be over 65, making the population the most aged in the world.
- That means Japan will have fewer workers to support the costly
- medical, social security and other needs of aging parents and
- grandparents.
- </p>
- <p> It's no mystery why the birthrate is dropping--Japanese
- women marry at 26 on average, later than in any other country
- except Sweden. The mystery is why they wed at all. The young men
- who want to enjoy barbecues with their families are heavily
- outnumbered by the Fuyuhikos, named after a character in a TV
- drama who was raised by his mother to excel at school and work
- but never to do anything else for himself and who expects his
- wife to pamper him the same way. Young women are putting off
- marrying the Fuyuhikos as long as they can. Older women who
- married Fuyuhiko types decades ago sometimes express their
- resentment at the bitter end: they insist that they be buried
- in individual graves rather than alongside their husband, a
- practice called shigo rikon--divorce after death.
- </p>
- <p> Happy relationships with its global partners may be no
- easier for Japan. On Friday, Prime Minister Kiichi Miyazawa
- calls at the White House for his first face-to-face encounter
- with Bill Clinton, who has already shown how broad the gap in
- mutual understanding could be. Dining with Russian President
- Boris Yeltsin at the Vancouver summit, Clinton remarked that
- "when the Japanese say yes to us, they often mean no." While
- many Japanese acknowledge their penchant for the ambiguous, the
- White House rushed to forestall any damage to the U.S.-Japan
- relationship. Clinton, said spokesman George Stephanopoulos, was
- only making "a casual comment about Japanese courtesy and
- etiquette." Even so, the Clinton-Miyazawa talks are unlikely to
- be a love feast. Coming to power after the end of the cold war,
- the Clinton Administration sees Japan not as an ally that must
- be indulged--the Reagan-Bush view--but as a nagging problem.
- Its formative years were the 1980s, when supercharged Japanese
- industry and money seemed able to score at will in the U.S.,
- while Japan's markets remained stubbornly resistant to American
- penetration.
- </p>
- <p> That experience persuaded many U.S. trade experts,
- including close advisers to Clinton, to advocate "managed
- trade," implying much heavier-handed efforts to reduce the U.S.
- trade deficit with Japan, on the rise again at $49 billion last
- year. Miyazawa will try to hang tough but will probably wind up
- making at least some concessions--though at the price of
- deepening resentment in both countries. And it is by no means
- sure how accommodating Japan will be this week when foreign and
- finance ministers from the Group of Seven industrial nations
- meet in Tokyo to put together a new package of aid to Russia.
- Japan no doubt will participate, but how much of the tab--possibly $30 billion--it can be encouraged to pick up is
- questionable. Even aside from its unresolved dispute with Moscow
- about the Kurile Islands, Tokyo has viewed funds poured into the
- chaotic Russian economy as money thrown away.
- </p>
- <p> The economic and political troubles have delayed any
- Japanese effort to play a greater role in world affairs. The
- country's population and importance would entitle it to a
- permanent seat on the United Nations Security Council, which
- Tokyo wants. To assume one, however, Japan would have to
- overcome its scruples about sending troops abroad, so that it
- could participate in any peacekeeping operations it might vote
- on. Japan did send 600 troops to Cambodia to repair roads and
- bridges under a U.N. peace mandate, but only after a bruising
- political fight that the Miyazawa government has neither the
- will nor the strength to repeat.
- </p>
- <p> Paradoxically, one source of friction with other countries
- has been lessened. Explains Peter Tasker, a strategist for the
- investment-banking firm Kleinwort, Benson International: "This
- is the first recession in Japan that is wholly homegrown. They
- can't blame the Arabs for an oil-price increase or the unions
- or the Americans."
- </p>
- <p> What the Japanese can blame is overconfidence. Businesses
- built too much capacity, hired too many workers and forgot about
- controlling costs, assuming that sales would always rise fast
- enough to keep profits up. Speculators used soaring land and
- stock values as collateral on loans to buy more land and shares
- at still more inflated prices. The government kept pumping air
- into what is now called the bubble, making sure that credit was
- easily available at artificially low interest rates.
- </p>
- <p> The inevitable bust began in 1990 with a fall in the stock
- market, which has now spiraled down into what, when all the
- figures are in, may rank as Japan's worst post-World War II
- slump. There is no convincing evidence that it is ending even
- yet. The stock market, after dropping 63% to a low of 14,309 on
- the Nikkei average last August, has rebounded and touched the
- 20,000 mark last week. Not only is that far below the 1989 peak
- of 38,915, but the recovery was partly a result of a government
- "Price-Keeping Operation"--a newspaper term sarcastically
- echoing the official name of the Peace-Keeping Operation in
- Cambodia.
- </p>
- <p> The government this week will announce a new stimulus
- package exceeding the $93 billion it poured in last August;
- preliminary speculation puts it at around $110 billion--in
- contrast to the $16 billion Clinton is struggling to get through
- the U.S. Congress. But businessmen complain that the spending,
- mostly targeted at public works, will do little to strengthen
- the two big soft spots in the economy: consumer spending and
- business capital investment. Nobody yet knows how long and how
- seriously the shakiness in the financial system will drag down
- the economy. The government figures banks' bad debts to be $100
- billion, but nobody believes that; other estimates run to over
- $300 billion.
- </p>
- <p> Japan's economy, politics and society for decades have
- displayed an awesome combination of stability and dynamism that
- can hardly be discounted even now. But the nation that for so
- many years looked like a combination of political cipher and
- economic steamroller is changing in ways that for all the
- present stress and turmoil should eventually benefit its
- citizens as well as the rest of the world. Goodbye, Godzilla,
- and good riddance.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-