Quote from Martinghoul:
See my response here:
http://www.elitetrader.com/vb/showthread.php?s=&postid=2868620&highlight=Japan#post2868620
Moreover, the debt as 200% of GDP is a very misleading figure, as it's 200% gross. If you take into account the various holdings of bonds by branches of the Japanese govt, the figure is smth like 120% (if memory serves). It's just one of the quirks of the Japanese govt accounts.
Nonetheless, at some point Japan will need to either rely more on foreign creditors or monetize debt to continue their debt spending. Whether they're at 120% or 200% or whatever statistic you wish to hold up when that occurs is beside the point. The point is that they will reach a tipping point, when deflation has finally run its course that all of their inflationary actions will finally take hold in a dramatic way.
Here we go with the manipulation story again... I don't subscribe to it, so we're gonna have to disagree here.
What exactly is it you don't subscribe to? The fact that governments and central banks manipulate interest rates, debt issuance and money supply in vain attempts to change inevitable natural forces that are work? You don't believe governments do all of the above??
Nobody is projecting anything. In fact, it's the people who look at Japan superficially and scream that it's destined for a disaster that are guilty of excessively simplistic thinking. Japan has issues, no doubt, but one should always do one's own legwork and avoid listening to the panic-mongers.
I agree. And I have done my own legwork, and the only reasonable conclusion one can draw is that when the deflation and deleveraging has finally run its course in Japan, it will be followed by massive inflation. And it appears we are on track to follow their footsteps here in the U.S.
If you wish to still disagree fine, I guess we'll both just have to sit back and wait and see who is right.