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In Japan’s Stagnant Decade, Cautionary Tales for America

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Hirofumi Gumi, a top official of Japan's Financial Services Agency, during the administration of prime minister Junichiro Koizumi, says he cannnot understand why America is making the same mistakes as Japan. It took some tough actions under the leadership of prime minister Koizumi (2001-2006)- after 6 years of failed policies till 2002 following Japan's banking crisis in 1996- that helped restore the country's banking system. Under Heizo Takenaka, as head of the agency supervising banks, a large part of the bad loans in the Japanese banking system were taken off the bank's books. Some banks with insufficient capital, such as Resona Bank, were nationalized. Takenaka told the banks not to cover up or pretend the problem was not big enough, and declared he was not open to negotiating. Gumi says Takenaka's tough actions helped to restore credibility in the country's banking system. One of the key lessons from Japan is that no stimulus is likely to succeed until the banking sector is fixed. This is the lesson the Obama administration has failed to grasp.

Errors made- US and Japanese economy comparisons for a lost decade.

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Japan's economy suffered badly after a flood of credit and bad loans, resulting in deflation and a lost decade. The comparison with what the US faces now.

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