Saturday, August 14, 2010
What Does Japan’s Decline Mean for Asia?
To lose one decade may be misfortune…” ran a recent article in The Economist about Japan’s economic woes, the unstated quip being that the next one was lost due to carelessness. Another “lost decade” would further justify such dark humor and also present the Asian region with a significant security challenge.
Japan’s economic decline is well-established. The country’s stock market, which was just below 40,000 points in 1989, finished 2009 at just over 10,500.
Yet Japan’s underlying economic problems are wider and more complex. They range from low growth and deflation to expanding public debt and rising inequality.
And the global financial crisis has further exacerbated matters.
What makes Japan’s economic woes a regional security challenge is the important role of the US-Japan alliance in maintaining regional stability.
If the alliance were weaker, it would have serious implications for regional stability.
As a Japanese analyst recently observed, a US downgrading of the alliance or withdrawal from the region could lead to faster Japanese military growth (notwithstanding its current economic lethargy), heightened threat perceptions and a greater scope for global insecurity.
Alliance troubles would make it harder if not impossible for the United States to pursue its “double assurance” strategy of instilling confidence in strategic partners and competitors alike.
How could Japan’s fiscal weakness potentially undermine the alliance?
Worsening economic troubles would add greater constraints to the already considerable political and cultural restrictions on Japan’s ability to contribute to the alliance and thus negatively affect America’s confidence in Japan as an ally.
Declining military spending over the past seven years illustrates Japan’s predicament, and the trend, in light of the country’s public debt, could well continue.
Shifting greater amounts of the total bill for ongoing agreements to the United States, as a recent report on the alliance’s future postulates, “would undoubtedly put strain on the alliance.”
Economic weakness together with export dependency could also influence Japan to mismanage its current hedging strategy in dealing with China and the United States.
Japanese leaders describe the country’s current approach as pursuing a more autonomous foreign policy, but the rise of China has provoked Japan to respond to the resulting geostrategic pressures in Asia.
This “return to Asia” policy might resolve some of Japan’s problems associated with its dark history, but there is no guarantee that any such policy would be more repentant than chauvinistic.
How might these problems of economic capacity and political image be addressed? Japan has received abundant economic and diplomatic advice during the post-war era.
However, owing to the difficulty of the necessary reforms, and the limited role played by outsiders, the utility of such advice seems minimal.
The more immediate challenge is to manage the wider security consequences of the decline, meaning that solutions should focus on strengthening the region’s security architecture.
The first option would be to strengthen Asia’s multilateral institutions. This might take the form of further developments to regional bodies such as the Asean Regional Forum or subregional bodies such as the Six Party Talks.
Or it could develop from former Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama’s vision of an East Asia Community. Policymakers would be aiming to establish institutions that could facilitate major power security dialogue, further enmesh Japan into the region, and ensure a continued US presence.
Yet region-wide institutions have many problems. Their talk-shop style, emphasis on “non-core” security issues and faith in socializing states echo E. H. Carr’s descriptions of the League of Nations in “The Twenty Years’ Crisis.”
Furthermore, underlying these institutions in recent years has been a rising competition between the region’s two major powers, China and the United States, and so they seem an unlikely venue for resolving core security challenges.
A multilateral approach to resolving these challenges is another option, but would China see this as a hardening of Western containment postures directed against it?
And would America’s partners and allies be willing and able to increase their own defense burdens?
Unfortunately, continued economic stagnation in Japan will present policymakers with many such dilemmas.
If Japan were to “lose” another decade, however, the US-Japan alliance, America’s grand strategy in Asia and the Asian security order would all be severely tested.
Whatever its specifics, any policy should address the region’s core security concerns, and the most practical path seems to be to extend or multilateralize the region’s bilateral security architecture in case there is further misfortune.
By David Envall postdoctoral fellow at the Department of International Relations at Australian National University. This article is a finalist in the recent EAF Emerging Scholars competition.
East Asia Forum
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