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Published 31 Dec, 2007 12:00am

Japan’s economy creates its own crisis

TOKYO: Never mind the US subprime loan crisis, the main cause of Japan’s lacklustre economic performance this year is entirely self-inflicted, according to analysts.

While investors are crying out for less red tape, efforts by Japan’s government to protect consumers and homeowners have taken the wind out of the sails of Asia’s largest economy even as global growth falters, they say.

The Japanese government recently slashed its growth forecast for the fiscal year to next March to 1.3 per cent from a previous target of 2.1 per cent, following in the footsteps of a host of independent forecasters.

One of the main reasons for the worse than expected performance this year is a slump in activity in the housing construction sector following the introduction of stricter earthquake resistance standards, analysts say.

Japan tightened the building regulations in June after a Japanese architect caused a nationwide scandal by using fabricated data to build apartment blocks that could be vulnerable to collapse during even a moderate tremor.

Nearly 100 condominiums and hotels designed by the architect were found to have been built using false earthquake resistance data, shocking a nation that endures 20 per cent of the world’s major tremors.

Following the introduction of the new rules, it now takes more than two months to obtain a construction permit, compared with three weeks previously.

The construction sector is not the only area of the economy to have been affected by new regulations.

In December 2006 the government introduced a new law to clamp down on consumer credit firms, drastically reducing the high interest rates they can charge borrowers.

The aim was to prevent poorer Japanese from suffocating under a mountain of debt, amid public concerns that the nation’s income gap is widening. But, according to local media, the move has forced some households desperate for cash to turn to the black market.

The growing web of red tape has also irked investors, adding to worries about the fallout from the US housing slump.

“Japanese policy decisions are based on political, not economic, rationality,” according to Dresdner Kleinwort analyst Peter Tasker.—AFP

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