by Tyler Durden
While we have heard all the usual excuses that "Japan had no other choices" and that Abe simply had to slay the "deflation ogre" (it is still unclear why deflation is bad for the common man, if quite clear why it is disastrous for massively insolvent and overlevered banks) the simple truth is that it was clear from the very beginning that Abenomics would be an abysmal failure. Ironically, in recent months the cheerleaders of Japan's last ditch effort to delay the inevitable have gotten a second wind: "look at all the inflation" they say, and point to it as evidence that Abenomics is indeed working. There is a problem - it is inflation of all the wrong "non-core" items. That inflation, it was also clear from the beginning, would surge. Read our take on just this from September:
In other words, all Japan managed to do is import the bad "non-core" inflation, which has sent food and energy prices through the rood (confused why the rest of the world is suffering from an episode of acute deflation? look no further than deflation-exporting Japan) and made "non-core" purchases like food and gas increasingly more unaffordable to the ordinary Japanese consumer. Today it just went from bad to worse, because as Nikkei reports, gasoline prices at the pump surged to a 5-year high in Japan this week, due to tax increases. The Oil Information Center says the average retail price was 164.1 yen, or about 1.6 dollars, per liter, as of April 1st. That's an increase of about 4.9 cents from the previous week. More from Nikkei:
Actually gasoline sales, and all other sales will be weak for a long, long time. Why? The one reason all the above-mentioned cheerleaders of Abenomics fall strangely silent when it comes to the one all important, beneficial inflation that by now should have arrived. That of wages. Unfortunately for Japan and those same clueless economist cheerleaders, as we reported on Tuesday, in February Japan announced that not only has there not been any base wage inflation, but wages have now declined for a Lehman-crisis like 21 consecutive months. So what next? Well, more pain until the locals get so sick of Abenomics, that Abe meets yet another prematue, Diarrhea-coated exit. Because while the Japanese stock market, which is still down materially YTD and hence instead of providing a "wealth effect" is merely adding to the "misery effect", may provide some temporary solace to those - about 20% or so - who are invested, everyone else is looking at even faster wealth destruction as the value of the Yen continues to slide, as "non-core" products like food and energy continues to rise to multi-year highs, and as wages continue to slide. This is what we said last time to summarize the dead end Japan is about to crash into head first:
All the same is true now. Only this time it's even worse. |
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