http://www.fool.com/investing/general/2008/11/11/failing-like-japan.aspx
Failing Like Japan
  
By Bill Mann 
November 11, 2008
    
In 1990 I spent a heady summer living in a very rural part of Japan. It was 
an incredible time to be there, the dawning of the age of Japanese hegemony. 
Japanese land, which comprised less than 0.1% of the world, was being valued at 
an estimated $20 trillion dollars, or 20% of the world's wealth at that time. 
Business leaders the world round were flooding into Japan to study the "Japanese 
Economic Miracle," and sought to implement its keiretsu and 
zaibatsu corporate structures.
We were in the middle of nowhere, but all around our little town, land was 
being chewed up to build golf courses that offered memberships primarily to 
businessmen from Okayama and Osaka, cities that were each a multi-hour ferry and 
train ride away. The cost of membership ran in the hundreds of thousands of 
dollars, and there was a long waiting list.
It didn't last.
The trouble with the Japanese miracle was that its basis wasn't management 
superiority -- though the country had some of the most admired companies in the 
world, including Toyota
      (NYSE: TM)
      
and Sony
      (NYSE: SNE). 
Rather, the miracle in Japan was based upon over-loaning from the government to 
industrial conglomerates, which led, inevitably, to a bubble.
Unfortunately, the aftereffects of the Japanese bubble persist to this day, 
and they have deep implications as the American government considers making 
bailout loans to the Big Three: General Motors
      (NYSE: GM), 
Ford
      (NYSE: F), 
and Chrysler.
Why Japan continues to fail
      
In late 1989 the Nikkei 225, 
Japan's leading stock index, hit an intraday high of 38,957. Today, 19 years 
later, it's at 8,800. This multi-decade loss speaks to two things -- one, just 
how out of control Japan's asset bubble was, and two, for the sake of 
maintaining jobs, the Japanese government has not made the hard decisions that 
would have allowed the country to grow.
In the aftermath of the bubble, Japan's government rushed in to prop up its 
banking system, which was teetering under the weight of nonperforming loans. 
Rather than letting businesses fail, this has had the effect of propping them up 
to continue operating. To this day the scope of the problem is still not 
known.
Without this information, investors both in Japan and outside have made a 
logical conclusion -- to take their investment dollars elsewhere. Japan's 
industrial sector has failed to meet its cost of capital over the last 20 years, 
in large measure because the government has allowed capital-destroying companies 
to continue to operate. Had these companies been allowed to fail, Japan long ago 
could have flushed out its system and gotten back on the road to economic 
health. In the name of protecting jobs, Japan's economy has continued to 
sputter, punctuated by spectacular bankruptcies in cases where the facade could 
not hold up. The cost of propping them up has been much, much more economic 
pain. Japanese call the long economic downturn ushinawareta junen, the 
lost decade.
Sure, but it's not your job we're talking 
about.
As I look at the pressure being placed on the U.S. government 
to bail out or even nationalize American auto manufacturers, I see the same 
faulty logic being used. So desperate is the government to protect these jobs 
and these massive companies that it is willing to spend taxpayer money to keep 
Detroit afloat. It might be a good use of capital if the Big Three were 
thriving companies that had simply suffered from exogenous events that they'd 
reacted to improperly. But they aren't. These companies are sick and dying, and 
they have not generated a positive capital return in decades.
It's not as if this were an unpredictable outcome, as I noted in 2003 when GM 
raised 
$13 billion in debt to shore up its pension system. To what end would we 
bail out these companies? To keep them from collapsing? Wake up -- they have 
already collapsed.
The "end," of course, would be to keep thousands of jobs, particularly in 
Michigan and Indiana, from disappearing, to keep pensioners from being mauled at 
a point in their lives when they cannot afford it. These are loyal, good company 
people. What is happening at the Big Three affects them deeply, and it is both 
unfair and cruel. To think otherwise would be inhumane. I have some experience 
here, as my own grandfather's pension withered away as the textile company he 
devoted his life to collapsed, in no small part because it refused to relocate 
its factories to cheaper places.
But economic growth only comes when capital is allowed to flow to its most 
productive uses. I am very sorry, but propping up Detroit's dinosaurs is not 
productive. They have destroyed capital for a generation. They have too much 
debt, they have above-market labor costs, they have shown minimal aptitude at 
developing automobiles that people want to buy at prices that allow the 
companies to turn a profit. They are losing to Toyota and Honda
      (NYSE: HMC). 
Their parts suppliers are, as a group, collapsing, with Dana Holding 
Corporation
      (NYSE: DAN)
      
and Visteon
      (NYSE: VC)
      
teetering on the precipice.
Pain delayed is not pain avoided
There are no good 
answers here -- none at all. Whichever way we go, there is going to be 
substantial pain in the American auto industry. But a government bailout of 
recidivist capital destroyers is a particularly bad idea, as it perpetuates the 
destruction, and delays capital formation for more productive uses. It is a 
bitter, bitter pill. Better to let the Big Three take their medicine, attempt to 
reorganize in bankruptcy and attempt to emerge anew as smaller, more nimble 
competitors.
At a minimum, it helps keep the Japan scenario off the table. It's been easy 
to see that the political decisions made in Japan to protect companies and jobs 
have been destructive. I've often thought that one of the reasons American 
capitalism is superior is our willingness to allow companies to fail. Now I'm 
not so sure.









发表于 2009-3-21 15:04:00

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发表于 2009-5-11 01:42:00

