Thirty years ago, many in the US were in fear that a rising power in Asia was on the verge of eclipsing the US. Now it's China, back then it was Japan.
Back in the late 1980s Japan had become the second largest economy in the world after the US and seemed like a juggernaut that couldn't be stopped. Many center-left economists thought that the post-World War II experience of Japan proved that industrial policy could work, with the government picking winners and losers and making sure favored industries and companies always got the credit they needed to grow. They were eager to bring that approach to the US.
History, however, had other plans. Japanese government policies bottled up capital in favored industries and pulled it away from widespread entrepreneurship. This meant the massive savings generated by Japanese workers were misallocated into a limited pool of domestic assets, with capital gains tax rates that favored listed stocks and drove up real estate prices. The result was dual massive bubbles, with stocks far more overvalued than US stocks were in 2000 while Japanese real estate was far more overvalued than the US was in 2005. As a sign of how large that bubble was, the Nikkei is still about 40% below the high set in 1989.
That peak in asset prices also coincided with a dramatic slowdown in economic growth that has lasted thirty years. To put an exclamation point on that, Japanese real GDP fell at a 6.3% annual rate in the fourth quarter of 2019. This was before any impact from the coronavirus and the largest quarterly decline in six years. While pandemics are serious and scary, the real cause of the drop was a national sales tax hike from 8% to 10%. Real GDP is now down 0.4% from a year ago.
It's deja vu. Japan keeps trying over and over again to boost economic growth with government policy – a combination of high government spending, high budget deficits, high taxes, quantitative easing, and, beginning in 2016, negative interest rates. Sounds exactly like what policymakers in Europe have tried, but more of it and for longer.
None of this has worked, and it won't work in the US, either. Not now, and not if we eventually go into a recession, which, thankfully we don't foresee anytime soon.