Quote from Daal:
I always hear that china and japan banking system needs to be reformed if they want to grow , whats the problem there?
It's a long story and really this was a question that would have been more timely a decade ago, when reform efforts started - now they have largely finished. This consisted mainly of clearing up bad loans that had been made during the late 1980s/early 1990s bubble, when it seemed that Japan would fly high for ever. 20 years ago the criteria for deciding loans to favoured customers (corporates with which they had close relationships) were too loose and often depended on land as a collateral when land prices had reached the stratosphere. When the bubble burst, land prices plummeted and the collateral was revealed to be insufficient to cover the loan.
So far, so unsurprising - this kind of thing has happened in many countries in the past. However, having never really been in this kind of situation before, the Japanese banks found themselves culturally incapable of biting the bullet and calling in bad loans. Indeed, for the larger debts, the banks did everything they could to avoid calling the loans and actually gave bad borrowers more money to prevent them from going bankrupt, because once that happened, the extent of the bad loans could no longer be hidden. So bad loans mushroomed.
This was a situation that persisted all through the 1990s. From the second half of the decade onward various attempts were made to clear these up e.g. through buying of bad loans by a central loan agency, injections of money by the government into failing banks, mergers between weak banks and so on. Over the past 3-4 years most of the remaining banks have turned the corner and are now in relative good health. Take a look at share prices since mid-2004.
Note that banks have traditionally been reluctant to lend money to startups and individuals. Individuals, including homeowners, did not play a major part in the Japanese bank problem as far as I know (remember that these people save more than most countries on earth and have done so consistently over the past 15 years). I knew a CEO who was the ex-head of a major Japanese company's semiconductor R&D lab - a name in the industry. He quit to start his own company in the early 1990s and not only could he not get money from banks, but landlords would not even let him offices because he didn't have big company backing. Things have probably changed...
China I know nothing about, but it's a completely different kettle of fish to Japan.
Suss