Saturday, February 6, 2010

Confidence in America

Still, by next year things could be worse: Japan’s public debt is expected to hit $9.4 trillion, or 181 percent of its gross domestic product. By that measure, Washington still looks good, if only by comparison.

One thing about public debt, it requires public confidence. Japan's AA rating on public debt was downgraded to "negative" from "stable" by Standard & Poor's last week. The 10-year JGB climbed to 1.380% on Thursday, its highest level since Nov. 12. This concerns the government because if the confidence isn't there, speculation may turn into reality. Japan currently has the highest debt of any industrialized nation and, unlike the confidence that keeps US interest rates fairly grounded, would raise the cost of servicing the debt to the Japanese government. In these situations the government needs to step in. Quantitative easing perhaps but this tactic has provided very little support in combating deflation.

This picture provides a warning to the US. Without growth in two key areas, consumer confidence and exports, the deflation will remain a burden to Japan's economy. Exports provide a keystone for fabricating the turnaround and much of this will ultimately depend on the US, the biggest consumers in the world. If this were a level playing ground, the US would be in the same boat. The US faced mild deflation the past year and a half and yet everyone I've talked to has been forecasting inflation in the near future. Why? Because the economy is in a recession and the wave of job growth, innovation, technological leadership, and consumer confidence will allow for interest rates to rise. This may be seen as speculative but it is the only the reason the dollar hasn't officially collapsed yet. Why would anyone be holding onto US dollars if they knew a recovery was unlikely? Perhaps the psychological acceptance of the US dollar still holds stronger than the speculative dismay of the US economy.

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