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The Japanese Political Economy: An Expatriot's Point of View
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18032 |
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Section : |
MODERN THOUGHT
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| Issue
Date : |
5 / 1990 |
5,548 Words |
| Author
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Martin Bronfenbrenner Martin Bronfenbrenner is professor of economics at the
University of California at Irvine. He formerly taught in the
department of international Politics, Economics, and Business
at Aoyama University in Tokyo. |
As a teacher of conventional, or "mainstream," economics, I can convince undergraduates (at least temporarily) that the sum of the three differences below must be Zero. If anyone of the three is positive, at least one of the others must be negative; if any one is negative, at least one of the others must be positive.
These three differences are as follows:
1. The difference between investment (purchase of the current output of investment goods, such as machinery and raw materials) and its saving (including the bidding-up of the prices of existing assets) in a country's private sector.
2. The difference between receipts (taxes less transfer payments, such as relief and public pensions) and expenditures (for the current output of goods and services) in the country's public sector. In other words, the total deficit of all the country's governmental units taken together.
3. The difference between the country's exports of its own current output of goods and services and its imports of the foreign current output of goods and services. In other words, the current account balance of the country, which includes but is not limited to its balance of commodity trade.
Bare Economics
I can also show students that a country's current-account balance must equal the sum of two other differences:
1. The difference between the country's net purchases of nonmonetary foreign assets (foreign real estate, foreign securities, foreign collectibles) and foreigners' net purchases of the country's own nonmonetary assets. In other words, its capital exports less its capital imports, or its capital-account balance.
2. The difference between the country's purchases and its sales of international reserve assets, meaning gold and convertible foreign currencies. In other words, its balance of payments.
This equation shows that the United States has a negative balance on current account because Americans save less than they invest, both as private citizens and as government bodies. At the same time, Japan has a positive current balance because the Japanese save so much more than
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