2013/01/15

The Debt Crisis is the Energy Crisis

Who's going to take a haircut on the national debt?


Why Japan's debt can never be repaid

If the 1,000 trillion yen national debt were a 50-year mortgage, the homeowner would have to pay down an average of 20 trillion yen in principal every year. Right now, the Japanese government has an income of 42 trillion, and 10.5 trillion of that goes to interest on the debt. To start paying off the debt, it would have to pay 20 trillion per year, leaving just 12 trillion to pay for defense, health care, education and so on. However, the current budget is 103 trillion, meaning that present spending obligations force the government to borrow an additional 61 trillion yen and forget about ever paying down the principal. The GDP and the tax base could never expand enough to generate the funds necessary. We could conceivably wish for high levels of inflation over the next few decades, which would make debt payments affordable, but the levels of inflation necessary could have some unpleasant downsides. Economists like to debate whether it is really a good idea to “inflate your way out of debt.” In the future, the government could be in the same position as a retiree who bought a bungalow for $20,000 in 1955 which is now worth $400,000.
But if inflating your way out of debt were so simple, why wouldn't the government consider going all in with this thought experiment, something which is no stranger than the trillion dollar coin:
The government could print a new set of currency bills, all with double the face value of old ones. All old bills could instantly be exchanged for the new bills. Every old 10,000 yen bill could be freely exchanged for a new 20,000 yen bill. The government would simultaneously run a computer program through the bank system and double the value of all deposits. Of course, all wages and prices would instantly double, including the price of foreign currencies, but - most importantly - all debts public and private would remain at their previous values. (It's no longer just Africa that needs a debt jubilee.) In this case, it would be glaringly obvious that creditors were being forced to take a haircut, and they would react by ceasing to lend or charging much higher interest rates, with a preference for short-term contracts with this newly unreliable debtor. If they were foreigners, they might want to retaliate with military force, as has happened in previous cases of national default. In any case, it would now be much easier for the government to start paying down its debt, and if it were not easy enough, this experiment could be run at different values. The currency could be tripled or quadrupled in its value. There would be no upper limit.
But hey, I’m no economist. What do I know? Yet is seems to me that the present policy of setting a mild 2% inflation target is just this very same scenario enacted in timid slow motion, and unlike the scenario above, there is no guarantee that it will inflate wages and liquid assets for working folk - which is probably the reason "serious people" would find it absurd. But the 2% target is so far short of what is necessary that there is no hope of it solving the problem. If a country is saying that it needs to inflate its way out of debt, it is tacitly announcing default.
In some sense, it doesn't really matter. Money and financial crises are just reflections of the physical world. This is why they so easily adopt physical phenomena like nuclear meltdowns as their metaphors. The debt crisis is the symbolic representation of the energy and environmental crisis. The national debt is like nuclear waste and greenhouse gases. Everyone knows the un-repayable burden is being passed on to future generations, but we choose not to apply elementary school math skills, do the above calculations and face the real problem. (Note that the largest number in the 50-year mortgage example was only four digits.) For more simple math exercises, see Global Warming’s Terrifying New Math.

Further reading, if you want to take it from a couple experts:

It is not guaranteed that a state can inflate its way out of debt. The danger is all too real that more inflation hits the costs and the revenues of the state in a way which widens the gap or deficit. The only ways out of excessive debt are to remove the deficit and grow the economy.

-John Redwood. Can You Inflate Your Way Out of Debt? December 12, 2012

“Turn next to whether it [inflating your way out of debt] will work. Inflation will do little for entities with floating rate liabilities (many households that borrowed near the peak of the boom) or relatively short term liabilities (banks). The US government, with debt duration of about 4 years, is unlikely to benefit much from a surprise inflation unless it is huge [bold emphasis added]; and the bulk of its promises are social security and healthcare that cannot be inflated away [because they are indexed to inflation]. Even distressed households that have borrowed long term could be worse off – with unemployment likely to subdue nominal wage growth, and higher food and fuel prices cutting disposable income.




2013/01/13

Prime Minister Abe on the Saturday Morning Cartoons



Until a couple years ago Japan’s national broadcaster had a weekly news program for children called Kodomo News. It featured fun, hands-on graphics like the ones in the photo above, and explanations of complex world events, with all their background history given in terms ten-year-old could understand. A veteran male journalist played the role of father and lead explainer, while a female journalist played a supporting role of mother, commenter and questioner. Three intellectually precocious children were chosen to play the role of the children in this “family.” Everyone knew they were not a real family, but the journalists were referred to as okaa-san and otou-san (mom and dad) as they made a pretense of being a family. 
Aside from the blatant paternalism, it wasn’t a bad show. My children gained a pretty good understanding of the conflicts in the Middle East, for example, and various other current events that appear in the daily news. Without such explanations, the news is just a constant stream of random, de-contextualized chaotic events, for children and adults alike. This, in fact, was the reason the show was cancelled. Audience research revealed that children weren’t watching. As the elderly came to make up a greater share of the population, more of them were at home tuning in to Kodomo News, and they loved the clear explanations of issues which, during their busy careers, were most likely heard about as random bites of information that told them nothing about why the information was relevant and newsworthy.
The cancellation of Kodomo News seemed to come with a realization that the adult news audience might as well be treated like children all the time. This picture above comes from an NHK News program that aired between 8:30 and 9:30 AM on Saturday January 12, 1013, and you can see that it kind of looks like Saturday morning cartoons. There is Prime Minister Abe in the top right corner commanding the levers of the economy, directing the Bank of Japan to start printing money and aiming for an inflation and employment target. Money is going to flow from the Bank of Japan to banks, then it will be loaned out to private companies or spent on public works projects, and the economy will be stimulated. It’s all so simple a ten-year-old could understand it, right?
The guest panel of experts provided some critical commentary and asked some challenging questions about whether workers could really expect wage gains to come quickly with this inflation target. In general, however, the whole show came across as a sestumeikai (explanation meeting), the sort of meeting where those in control of the message explain how things are going to be. A setsumeikai is not a discussion, debate or negotiation. This one-hour discussion never touched on the enormous national debt that can never be repaid, nor did it mention energy policy. Last year, the crushing expense of increased imports of fossil fuels, necessitated by the shutdown of nuclear plants, was said to be a fatally serious problem in the economy. This year, under the new so-called "Abenomics," a weak yen is apparently the savior, even though it makes fossil fuel imports more expensive. The plan seems to be that energy issues are out of the discourse until the LDP safely gets a majority in the Upper House next summer. After that, they can really get going on their agenda. For the next few months they will be dazzling the nation with PR campaigns trumpeting everything they are doing with their $116 billion stimulus budget. So far, the plan is working.
The panelists on yesterday’s morning show also never touched on the underlying cause of economic problems: the inverted demographic pyramid. Abe and the LDP are harking back to the early 1960s, thinking that if they host the Olympics again they will usher in another fantastic era of economic growth. They have falsely attributed a causal relation just because the Olympics and economic growth were once observed to have occurred one after the other. They conveniently ignore other factors of the time such as that Japan was starting from a much smaller GDP that had a lot of potential for growth. The nation had a baby boom, a young work force, and the economic stimulus provided by American economic growth and American spending on the Cold War, and the Korean and Vietnamese Wars. In any case, from this point forward, a repeat of the quadrupling in energy consumption is not possible or desirable, and this leads to another remarkable flaw in the LDP fairy tale: climate change doesn’t exist.
Perhaps the most alarming statement I heard on the NHK program was that the host said Abenomics promises interest rates will not increase as a result of this policy of a weakening yen and inflation. Most homeowners in Japan opt for one-year or three-year mortgage contracts at about 1.5% in order to save the extra one percentage point they would pay to lock in at 2.5% for 25 years. No one alive now has any experience with a high interest rate environment. Homes and condominiums in Tokyo still, after the bubble pop of 1991, cost upwards of $500,000, and most people can afford them only at the very low rates. A tripling of that 1% rate would be bring on a lot of home foreclosures, and the government would default on the national debt in the same way.
Today New York Times Japan correspondent Hiroko Tabuchi tweeted on this topic, asking who is right on Japan: J. Kyle Bass (hedge fund analyst who protected his investors from the 2008 housing crash), or Paul Krugman (NYT writer and winner of a Nobel in economics). J. Kyle Bass thinks Japan is headed for higher interest rates and default, while Paul Krugman seems to think debt is irrelevant and Abenomics is a “worthwhile Japanese initiative” that, “on the macro level” is something America should envy. Time will tell.

2013/01/10

Dream On



“Fukushima was almost 200 miles away from Tokyo, and yet Tokyo soil in some places, the ones I just happened to find, would qualify as radioactive waste here in the United States.”


If the image above has any resemblance to another poster, it is completely random coincidence. As UN researchers on the effects of radiation might say, correlation is not evidence of causation. All I want to point out with the design is the fact that according to safety standards of the nuclear industry itself, Tokyo should be considered a “candidate city” for radiological decontamination, and a reasonable completion date might be, let’s say, 2020, but the sooner the better.
Yet of course, this is not going to happen because the Japanese government is busy promoting feel-good projects such as the 2020 Olympic bid as a strategy for making the world forget about radiological contamination and the crushing national debt.
If it was somewhat possible in the past to disagree respectfully and have some amount of sympathy for the difficult challenges the government has had to handle in the Fukushima catastrophe, this sentiment is completely gone now. Lately, the actions and policies of government have become just downright pitiful and embarrassing. One can only feel sorry for the people represented by this government. It has become like the drunk uncle at a family gathering whose antics and ravings just make everyone want to head quietly for the exits.
A case in point is this poster released this week as advertising for the Olympic bid. The anonymous Japanese blogger at ex-skf.blogspot.com translated it thus:



Right now, Nippon
needs the power of this dream.
Olympics and Paralympics give us a dream.
A dream gives us power.
Power builds our future.
We need this power right now.
To be as one.
To be strong.
Let's tell the world how strong Japan is.
Because we're sure the world will be encouraged.
                                                                              
Ex-skf makes the important point that there is nothing lost in translation here. The original text is just as ungrammatical and childish as the English version. It is described as “arrogant gibberish” which “Even the Japanese are dismayed at… It reads like fluffy TV commercial copy by the nation's top ad agency.
The poster naturally invited ridicule and parody. One anonymous commenter wrote:

Right now, Nippon
needs the power of this delusion.
Olympics and Paralympics give us a delusion.
A delusion gives us false confidence.
False confidence builds our future.
We need this false confidence right now.
To be as none.
To be wrong.
Let's tell the world how wrong Japan is.
Because we're sure the world will be discouraged.
Now, let's [have] 2920 Olympics/Paralympics in Nippon! (It should be safe by then)

It’s interesting to note as well the company that Tokyo is keeping with its Olympic bid. The two other cities that made the cut as candidate cities in the competition (to be decided in September, 2013) are Madrid and Istanbul. These days it is difficult to think of a city or country that has the economic vitality to afford the Olympics, but there are places more qualified than the three that volunteered to join the race. Joining the ranks of Olympic game hosts may be something like joining a nerdish high school club now, ranking in coolness along with wanting to host a World Fair (Did anyone notice the 2012 Expo in Yeosu, South Korea?) The world has moved on. The more democratic and thriving nations, like the Scandinavian countries, are not interested because a bid would not be popular with voters, and those democracies do a better job of satisfying their citizens' wishes and needs.
The London Olympics seemed to put an end to the myth of economic stimulus coming from the games. As much as there are construction jobs, tourists, and increased confidence, these are offset by the negatives of real estate speculation, price gouging, debt, and letdown after the games. Larry Elliot, the economics editor of The Guardian wrote during the London games:

A week in and expectations of a major boost to growth are rapidly being downgraded. There are certainly plenty of overseas tourists in London, but the capital always has lots of foreign visitors at this time of year. Net tourism would be down if the number of potential visitors deterred by horror stories about gridlock and fears about being ripped off exceeded the numbers coming to London for the judo, athletics and beach volleyball. Evidence of half-full hotels suggests this may be the case… Britons appear to be giving London a miss. Some employees have been told to work from home for the duration of the Games, where the temptation to channel surf … may not do wonders for their productivity. In addition, shopping trips to central London appear to have been put on hold, contributing to the stories of empty shops, while the wet weather has led to a last-minute increase in sales of foreign holidays.

After a little more than a century of the modern games, the world seems to be tiring of the spectacle, and the prize is left for the latecomers who haven’t noticed that the world has moved on. I have to wonder if the smart money in the world is snickering privately at this losers’ race. Have at it Istanbul, Madrid, and Tokyo. Knock yourselves out. Everyone else who is still interested will stay home and watch on their widescreen TVs.
A Wikipedia page on the 2020 bids and candidate cities indicates that Toronto, and several other cities that considered bids, withdrew with the global financial crisis cited as the impediment. It’s strange that the three candidate cities didn’t have the same reservations because their economic data is much more dire than that of some of the cities that pulled out.
Portugal, Italy, Greece and Spain are lovingly referred to as the PIGS group by their northern neighbors for the wreckage they have caused to the Eurozone. It’s a mystery that Spain can spend money on an Olympics bid after receiving billions of bailout euros. Turkey has a per capita GDP only half that of Japan, and it may soon be dragged into the proxy war of Russia + Iran vs. Israel + the West - the conflict more commonly known as the troubles in Syria. Japan has a horrific debt to GDP ratio that will lead to eventual default, and it should feel a moral obligation to give direct aid (not wishful economic stimulus schemes) to the victims of the triple disaster. With the land in a period of increased seismic activity, and the political establishment staggering toward nuclear plant restarts and a showdown with China, it’s a gamble for the IOC to think Tokyo could be a competent host in 2020.
I’d bet that Tokyo and Madrid are throwing money down a hole because as long as Istanbul can put together a decent proposal, the IOC is likely to think it’s time for an Islamic country to host the games. Until September, I’m hoping that the IOC will do us a favor and pass on Tokyo. This country has enough to suffer through without seven more years of inane, vacuous boosterism.

2013/01/08

Japan's Ongoing Decontamination Fraud


More than a year and a half since the nuclear crisis, much of Japan’s post-Fukushima cleanup remains primitive, slapdash and bereft of the cleanup methods lauded by government scientists as effective in removing harmful radioactive cesium from the environment.

“Even if a method works overseas, the soil in Japan is different, for example,” said Hidehiko Nishiyama, deputy director at the environment ministry, who is in charge of the Fukushima cleanup. “And if we have foreigners roaming around Fukushima, they might scare the old grandmas and granddads there.”

- Hiroko Tabuchi. “In Japan, A Painfully Slow Sweep.” The New York Times. January 7, 2013.

For the past year my fifteen-year-old son has been coping with the pressure of his last year of Japanese junior high school. This is the year when everyone’s fate narrows considerably. Students are tested continually and nudged toward the high schools considered to be the most suitable match for their standardized test scores. Education is mandatory only up to completion of junior high school, and the government has never built a free public secondary education system that can take in all students who want to attend. Instead, Japan allowed a complex system of government-subsidized private schools to meet the demand. The best alternative is usually the top-ranked public school within commuting distance, but entry is extremely competitive. Some public schools are middle ranking or lower. These are accessible to many students who are not high-scoring on tests, but many families opt to pay extra for private schools.
The ultimate goal for the children who aim for the top in this system is to enter the prestigious universities such as Keio, Waseda, University of Tokyo and University of Kyoto, and a few others. The political, business and bureaucratic elite is made up of graduates from these schools. The great mystery of this system is how this tribe of the supposed best and brightest could be so dumb and ethically bankrupt in their response to the radiological contamination of Fukushima prefecture, as well as in other matters of national leadership.
This month The Asahi Shinbun (this link contains links to Parts 1-3 of the report) broke an investigative story that finally blew the lid of the obvious fraud that has been called the “decontamination” of areas affected by the Fukushima catastrophe. The New York Times reported on the story a few days later.
Since the decontamination program began, thousands of citizens, bloggers and whistleblowers have decried the meaningless waste of money spent on the impossible task of undoing the contamination. It’s nice that a major media organization finally got around to making this a legitimate story.
The fraud is, or should be, an enormous scandal. $7.4 billion dollars was budgeted for decontamination and doled out to various firms that had dubious and varied levels of expertise in handling radioactive materials. Domestic and foreign companies with proven potential for real decontamination work were neglected in favor of politically connected construction companies who have done slapdash work. The work was done properly, for public relations displays, only around official monitoring posts. Elsewhere, soil, vegetation and water were just moved from one place to another. Permanent storage spaces, sealed off from the environment, were in most cases not sought because everyone involved knew there was no permanent solution. People doing the work were not properly protected. A spokesman for the contractors, quoted in the New York Times article, acknowledged that their methods were not as effective as those of the specialized companies, but they defended themselves by saying only their methods were cost-effective – which is another way of saying no one ever had any intention of paying for real decontamination work. When people complained to both the local and national levels of government, there was no follow up or enforcement of the stiff penalties that were legally possible.
Of course, the bureaucrats who dreamed up this plan are not stupid, as I sarcastically stated above. They know exactly what they are doing. They have to create a false perception of the catastrophe’s implications. They want to declare the evacuated territories safe and clean and put residents back onto their contaminated land. These people must be sacrificed for the sake of restoring the nation’s energy policy and the lies about the safety and necessity of nuclear energy. So while bureaucrats and politicians may not be stupid enough to sincerely believe that this decontamination is not ridiculous, they are evidence that Japan’s education system erodes the ethical sensibilities that emerge naturally in children, and that is not an easy achievement.
The problem is that intelligence and morality are not really independent of each other. Unethical policies are stupid because they erode faith in government and the will to solve problems collectively (see picture below). This country could literally cease to be if leaders don’t get over their preoccupations with hosting the 2020 Olympics, singing the national anthem and boosting defense spending in order to hold onto the Senkaku Islands.



An additional problem is that cynical, unethical motives require one to play dumb, and this must take a toll on one’s soul. For example, you have to put your country $7.4 billion further in debt for a plan that everyone can see will not succeed in its stated aims, and you have to pretend you can’t do calculations with these big numbers or put this spending in a sensible perspective with other potential uses of the money.
These days children in their early teens are forced to learn advanced math that earlier generations never saw until late secondary school, but somehow adult math literacy has been dumbed down by elite bureaucrats. There is no public understanding of what $7.4 billion means, and reporting on financial matters doesn’t contain simple calculations or comparisons that would help the public understand.
So here is some perspective. The new Chernobyl containment structure cost $0.768 billion, and this was an amount that the EU and the United States took a very long time to cough up. Even though the new structure was needed to prevent Europe from being exposed to a “second Chernobyl,” and it is a miniscule amount compared with what has been spent to rescue Greece from financial default, it was apparently a difficult matter to get the funding for it. On the other hand, the conservative, “fiscally responsible” government of Canada has had no problem spending $1.2 billion to clean up radioactive contamination in the small town of Port Hope – home to the Cameco nuclear fuel processing facility. This little problem in Canada hardly registers in the history of nuclear energy, but for some reason the money was available. So what’s a billion dollars? Obviously, not much these days. What matters are the values and ethical judgments we make in deciding how to spend a billion dollars.
If the brilliant elite graduates of the Japanese bureaucracy wanted to stop ignoring what are simple math questions but difficult ethical questions, they could easily calculate how much $7.4 billion would give to each of the 150,000 people who were forced by government order to evacuate from Fukushima:  

7,400,000,000 / 150,000 = 740,000 / 15 = $49,333

So let’s add a bit onto the national debt and round that up to $50,000. That’s $200,000 for a family of four, enough for them to go somewhere far away and start life over. It’s not justice, but it’s not a bad deal compared to the option of staying put. The alternative is to move back to a town which will not be decontaminated and never repopulated to its prior level. The well-known pattern of disaster zones is that those with skills and resources leave and never come back, while those who do come back inhabit a town that goes into inevitable decline. But the real goals of the decontamination project were never meant to help the people affected. As it was put by a resident quoted in The New York Times, “It’s clear the decontamination drive isn’t really about us anymore.” The evacuees are sacrifices for the bigger project of minimizing damage to the reputation of nuclear energy, which, like decontamination, will prove to have been a futile endeavor.

Other statistics on national spending and revenue in Japan (in YEN)

national debt
1,000,000,000,000,000
annual interest paid on national debt
10,500,000,000,000
annual revenue
42,000,000,000,000
recently announced 2013 budget
103,400,000,000,000
ratio of budget to revenue
2.45:1
decontamination project
650,000,000,000
recent addition to defense budget
180,000,000,000
annual interest % of annual revenue
25.0
decon. project % of annual revenue
1.5
decon. project % of annual interest
6.1

Data in the above table reported by Kyle Bass and The Japan Times

US$1 = 88 yen (2013/01/08) 

2013/01/05

Top man in Belgium's nuclear regulatory agency played Santa Claus to anti-nuclear lobby


“In all honesty, if I consider the risk, I would choose other forms of energy.”
- outgoing head of Belgium’s Agence Fédérale de Contrôle Nucléaire (AFCN), December 24, 2012

It is sometimes interesting to hear the frank thoughts of retiring politicians and officials, and more interesting when they try to bring about the change that was impossible in their official roles. Al Gore is famous for his campaign to raise awareness of global warming. Mikhail Gorbachev atoned for Chernobyl by establishing Green Cross, Jimmy Carter worked for Habitat for Humanity and Bill Clinton organized the foundation of a public health care system for Rwanda. George H.W. Bush has a reputation for enjoying golf and the lecture circuit, but he too has supported various good causes. It seems like powerful people can do more for the world after they are out of power, if they decide to use their public profiles and retirement time well.
A recent addition to this list might be Willy De Roovere. He’s not a former world leader, but he is a rare nuclear industry insider who was willing to publicly discuss the problems with nuclear energy that have become evident in the post-Fukushima world. Speaking as the head of a nuclear regulatory agency, it is remarkable to see him express these doubts. It is unthinkable that a top French, American or Japanese regulator would dare to express such misgivings about nuclear energy policy. In fact, directors are literally not allowed to express any personal opinions based on their years of experience in the industry. What they say in their official capacity must always be the official line that is the compromised, consensus view of the director’s allies and foes within the agency. However, on the eve of retirement, things can be different.
The report below is a translation of an article in Le Monde that appeared in late December, 2012. I was waiting to see if English language media would pick it up, but none did, so it fell on me to translate it for the English speaking world.

Le Monde 2012/12/27
Jean-Pierre Stroobants
Brussels
(translated from the original French report)

The director of the Belgian Agence Fédérale de Contrôle Nucléaire (AFCN) until the end of the year, Willy De Roovere, caused a sensation in his country by calling into question the safety of the industry. “We should ask ourselves if the risk of nuclear is still acceptable,” he explained on Monday  December 24, on a public Flemish language radio broadcast. This top regulator managed in the past, among other responsibilities, the Doel nuclear power plant, one of two in Belgium.
“In all honesty, if I consider the risk, I would choose other forms of energy,” added Mr. De Roovere in this interview, evoking the economic risks linked to such a decision. Every industry carries some risk, he continued, “but it is very difficult in the present period” to make the population accept the risks associated with nuclear energy - in particular, in a territory as densely populated as Belgium, where an evacuation could involve hundreds of thousands of people. Mr. De Roovere explained in another interview published on Tuesday in the Belgian daily Le Soir, “My thoughts are a consequence of the catastrophe in Fukushima. With nuclear the risks are low, but the consequences of an accident can be extremely serious.”

“The existing power plants must be watched very closely.”

The director of the AFCN feels that from now on it is appropriate, in Belgium and in Europe, to avoid constructing more nuclear power plants. As for existing ones, “They must be watched very closely,” he declared. With regard to next generation reactors, Mr. De Roovere insists, “Each country should debate while keeping in mind the principal question: what is the level of residual risk that is acceptable for the population? I suppose this discussion took place in France when there was a decision to construct an EPR reactor.”
Nonetheless, Mr. De Roovere has a reassuring attitude about the regulation of Belgian nuclear installations. If he thinks the controls can never exclude the possibility of a failure, he states, “we can ensure that a failure will not lead to a catastrophe. And, until now, no discovered faults in the facilities have posed any risk to the population.”
The comments by the top person at the agency came as a surprise because two Belgian reactors, Tihange 2 and Doel 3 have been stopped since August. Their reactor vessels had numerous micro-fissures. Operated by Electrabel, subsidiary of GDF Suez, these reactors are the most modern of seven reactors in Belgium, and they supply 30% of electricity consumption in the country.
The AFCN will have to decide, probably within twenty days, if it will authorize their restart. It is the successor of Mr. De Roovere, Jans Bens, another former director of Doel, who must make this decision. This past summer, the AFCN announced that it was “skeptical” about a restart of Doel 3.

In Europe, safety inquiries have not always been convincing.

Electrabel declared in early December that Tihange 2 and Doel 3 could restart immediately. Teams of electricians, assisted by foreign experts, confirmed that international standards had been met at the time of construction of the power plants. The metal of the reactor vessels is sound and bubbles had resulted from minimal flaws caused by hydrogen.
These bubbles were formed at the time when the vessels were forged by a Dutch company, Rotterdamsche Droogdok Maatschappij (RDM). At the time when the reactors were stopped, the former head of this corporation rejected this theory.
The final decision of the AFCN, which is a prelude to the final decision by the Belgian government, will be followed with interest in other countries. This is because RDM sold twenty similar reactor vessels throughout the world. Also, in the aftermath of Fukushima, there is strong concern about all nuclear installations in Europe. The inquiries that have been launched by the European Commission attempted to be reassuring, but they haven’t convinced all parties.
On the other hand, the Nuclear Forum, a Belgian lobby group, believes that stress tests have proven that nuclear power plants in Europe, and particularly in Belgium, are safe. It finds Mr. De Roovere’s position “incomprehensible.”
After various reversals, several months ago the Belgian authorities adopted a timetable for moving beyond nuclear. It plans a definitive stop of five reactors in 2025, and Doel 1 and 2 are to stop in 2015. The decision was made before conclusive tests were complete, which leaves the door open to other changes in the plan.
Unless a crisis of supply – a real possibility evoked in an official report last May – comes along to upset these plans.

2012/12/30

Abe's Debt Bomb

Happy New Year. Out with the old, in with the new, or year going, year coming, as they say in Japan. This week: Prime Minister Abe prepares to detonate the debt bomb, spurious data on Japan’s “surging” fossil fuel use, and contemplating nuclear war without nuclear weapons.


The Fukushima Daiichi NPP catastrophe would pose enormous challenges to any country, even to one with the best material circumstances to respond to it. To understand why Japan is so dismally unable to decommission the site and give a better life to its victims, one has to take account of dire lack of human and financial resources that Japan has even for its normal functioning, let alone for recovery from a massive natural disaster and what may be the largest industrial accident in history.
The problem is that few people in Japan, from its leaders to its kindergarten students, are even aware of how bad things are. For the last twenty years, Japan has been living by borrowing the savings accumulated by the post-war generation that rebuilt the country. Since this borrowed money has allowed the nation to maintain a comfortable standard of living, few are aware of just how bad things are going to get. Pretty soon, the cheap supply of money will be gone.
One person with the professional credentials to alert the world to this coming crisis is J. Kyle Bass, founder of Hayman Capital in Houston, Texas. He is famous for having foreseen the subprime crisis and for having protected his clients from it. Since then he has been warning of the dangers of sovereign debt.
In a video of his keynote address at the AmeriCatalyst conference on October 1, 2012, Kyle Bass had much to say about the frightening day of reckoning that is in Japan’s near future. Notes on the parts of his keynote address pertaining to Japan are below:

1.           The quantitative analysis of the global debt crisis is already done. It is now only a matter of when and how the consequences will be realized.
2.           In the past ten years, total global credit market debt (sovereign obligations, corporate and household debt…,) has gone from $80 trillion to $200 trillion – this is 11% compound annual growth rate. This rate is way ahead of global population growth (1.2%) and GDP growth (3.8%).
3.           We know from history how this ends. This ends with war, which is economic entropy played to its logical conclusion.
4.           Global debt is 340% of global GDP.
5.           Post WWII, 48% of countries decided to restructure their debt.
6.           We have already seen social unrest over food and entitlements. What we have seen in Greece, for example, is not just a little social unrest.
7.           We all react to pessimistic forecasts with the optimism bias. We admit bad things will happen, but we think they will happen elsewhere to other people.
8.           Another sign that history is repeating itself in is in the recent expression of nationalism between China and Japan over the Senkakus, islands which, despite what you have heard, have no resources worth fighting for.
9.           Many people fail to see looming crises because they believe axiomatic truths (truths deemed to be true only because everyone repeats them) such as “real estate always goes up.” An axiomatic truth about Japan is that its debt doesn’t matter because “Japan is self-funding” – that it doesn’t borrow money outside Japan, so things will be alright. This is simply not true.
10.        We are slow to see crises coming because doomsday beliefs don’t help us, so we don’t want to believe them even though they may be accurate.
11.        The end won’t be announced. The people managing the crisis and making decisions in back rooms believe, “When it becomes serious you have to lie.” Their job is to promote confidence. [This is strikingly similar to what happens in a nuclear emergency. Preventing panic is believed to be a justifiable sin.]
12.        Japan has a debt to GDP ratio of 211%. This is far higher than some other developed nations that are considered to have serious problems with a ratio of around 100%.
13.        There is 1 x 10E+15 yen of debt in Japan [that’s a 1 followed by 15 zeros, or one thousand trillion. Or it’s 1.17 x 10E+13 US dollars at 85 yen/dollar, which is $11.7 trillion. US debt: $16 trillion, with a GDP and population both about 2.5 times those of Japan]. Japan's debt can never be repaid.
14.        There will be a bond crisis in Japan in the next 2 to 3 years.
15.        Japan now spends 10.5 trillion yen/year on interest, while it brings in only 42 trillion yen in revenue.
16.        If interest rates go from where they are now (less than 1% and very close to zero) to 2% or higher, Japan will be in default. Every yen of revenue will have to go to interest payments. This is very simple math that many smart people refuse to acknowledge.
17.        A trade surplus turns into corporate profits and wages which become savings that can be used to fund government bonds.
18.        Self-funding of deficit spending is possible only if the trade surplus is large enough. Japan is now showing trade deficits, but even a surplus can be insufficient if it is not big enough to fix the problem. The only choice is to print more money or be a capital importer. Both of these alternatives lead to higher interest rates on the national debt.
19.        Competition for foreign investment will be severe when Japan has to borrow internationally. Who will buy Japanese bonds at 0.5% if they can get higher returns by buying the bonds of other countries? In the past, investors settled for the low returns on Japanese bonds because of the strength of the yen and the economic stability of the country. These strengths will not exist in the future.
20.        The homeostasis of the past 20 years cannot continue. Japan is at the end of its rope.
22.        Similar problems exist elsewhere. The Asian trade surplus is at its lowest in recent history. The world is about to enter an era of sovereign restructurings.

Just before the recent Japanese election, Kyle Bass added to his October speech by writing on his blog about the ill-advised economic policy that the new prime minister, Shinzo Abe, wishes to follow: 

“Japan is already running a minus $100 billion trade balance…, and the country's GDP has been hit by Chinese boycott stemming from the Diaoyu/Senkuku islands dispute… We think Abe is a shoo-in. And he said he's going to do everything possible to get to 3 percent inflation. He doesn't even know what he wishes for because if he gets there, he detonates his debt bomb.
  When there's a press release put on the BOJ's website from the MOF, the BOJ and the government — that's analogous to Bernanke, Geithner and Hillary Clinton issuing a joint press release saying 'we're going to end deflation'. This is how it begins to happen. Their backs are against the wall. They have a full crisis. They absolutely have to change the manner in which they deal with their currency.”

Interestingly, for the past two weeks the Japanese media have been awash in the new axiomatic truth that because TEPCO stocks, and the stock market in general, responded favorably to Abe’s inflationary plans, this must mean that economic recovery is at hand. I heard this view repeated several times by people around me, even by my students who are, at all other times, blissfully ignorant of current events.

Spurious claims about fossil fuel imports

Kyle Bass’ analysis should be taken seriously, but the discussion needs to expand to the broader issues of environmental preservation and avoidance of conflict and social upheaval. Obviously, the implications are enormous. If every yen of government revenue has to go to service debt, that means there will be no money for education, health care, pensions, defense, and none for cleaning up the legacy of Japan’s fifty-year experiment with nuclear power. The debt bomb leaves nothing for decommissioning the wreckage of Fukushima Daiichi, nothing for decommissioning aging reactors, nothing for a final storage solution for the nuclear waste now in temporary storage. And definitely nothing for the 160,000 nuclear evacuees.
Furthermore, the fiscal crisis tempts policy makers to see further use of nuclear power plants as the solution to the trade deficit.  Nuclear fuel is indeed extremely cheap compared with the cost of importing fossil fuels. There are the future costs of decommissioning and spent fuel storage, but no one is going to worry about those in a crisis. As usual, push that one off onto future generations. The other large cost is construction of the plants, but that has already been done. In fact, all the money sunk into the nuclear industry could be considered as regrettable addition to the national debt, a lost opportunity to invest in renewables and energy efficiency. Even if everyone could agree that it was a horrible error to go down the nuclear road, the logic dictates that they might as well use the facilities that have been built.  On the other hand, it might be wiser to see the Fukushima catastrophe as a final warning about operating nuclear plants in a land riddled with seismic fault lines. The Japanese government risks destroying the whole country with another nuclear accident, but with their backs up against the wall, this is the sort of desperate kamikaze behavior politicians now favor.
In addition to the Fukushima catastrophe, the nuclear industry wasted trillions of yen in national treasure before 2011. One of the largest nuclear plants in the world, TEPCO’s Kashiwazaki, has been offline since the 2007 Niigata earthquake because of newly discovered fault lines that weren’t supposed to be there. Fault lines keep appearing under other existing reactors. The reprocessing facility in Rokkasho and the fast breeder Monju reactor have wasted trillions of yen also, without having ever produced any of their promised benefits.
It is a dangerous illusion to be tempted to go back to nuclear as a fix for the fiscal deficit. It is folly to carry on with a dangerous technology that has devoured, and will continue to devour, so much of the nation’s wealth.
Nonetheless, there is an emerging axiomatic truth that Japan needs to reduce fossil fuel imports in order to mitigate economic decline. It has been repeated often in the domestic and international media throughout 2012, but the numbers don’t seem to back up the claim.
OECD data reports that its member countries use the majority of fossil fuels for transport, heating and industrial applications, and non-energy uses such as plastics. I couldn’t find any data on Japan itself, but it is not likely to be much different from the average of OECD countries (which Japan belongs to). Before 2011, about 20-30% of Japan’s electricity was produced by nuclear energy, and after the shutdown of nuclear plants this had to be covered by increased use of fossil fuels. But electricity is not the biggest part of energy consumption. The International Energy Association reports, for example, “In 2009, heat represented 47% of final energy consumption [worldwide], compared with 17% for electricity, 27% transport; and 9% for non-energy use.”
Much of the reporting on the energy crunch caused by the loss of nuclear has framed it as a sudden 40% (or larger, the figures vary widly) increase in fossil fuel imports, but the increase of course has to be much smaller when it is seen as an addition to fossil fuel imports for all purposes, not only for electricity generation.
Japan gets all its fossil fuels through imports, and according to the World Bank, for the last decade in Japan, energy derived from fossil fuel accounted for about 81% of all energy produced. The rest came from hydro, nuclear and renewables. If this is the case, how could the loss of nuclear power cause such a crippling disaster for the balance of trade? At most, the increase in fuel imports would have been 10-15% if we imagine adding to the 81% figure above (assuming renewables and hydro would account for the remainder). If it had really been such a crisis, there would have been a conservation program aimed at reducing the biggest factor in fuel imports - consumption of fossil fuels for transportation and heating. There would have been fuel rationing in a real emergency. Instead, all the talk was of the need to conserve only electricity, and even that attempt wasn’t as severe as it could have been. The cigarette vending machines stayed on, and people were told to keep shopping to support the economy.
The Federation of Electric Utilities of Japan provided this data about the spike in fuel imports, comparing January 2011 and January 2012:




Mark Caine, a research officer at Research Officer at the London School of Economics, used the above table to write an obfuscating report about Japan’s energy crunch. It is typical of how the power companies and the media confused the public about how Japan consumes fossil fuels:

“The Federation of Electric Power Companies, an industry group representing Japan's largest electric utilities, has just released new data on Japanese fossil fuel imports for January 2012. The data reveal that last month, despite an overall drop in economy-wide energy use, Japan imported and consumed far larger quantities of fossil fuels than it did in January 2011 [italics added], before its earthquake, tsunami, and nuclear disaster upended its economy and energy system.”

He states, “Japan imported and consumed far larger quantities…,” but what is obscured here quite deliberately is the fact that this data refers not to fuel imports by Japan as a whole but to fuel imports by Japan’s electric utilities. Their purchases increased, but purchases for transportation and other uses did not. Later in the report he writes, “To meet surging demand for these fossil fuels, Japanese utilities increased imports of fuel oil by 165%, crude oil by 174%, LNG by 39%, and coal by 12%. It appears that much of this fuel was used for thermal power generation.” If not for thermal power generation, what might have these electric power companies used the fuel for? In any case, even if this sentence now uses the factually correct grammatical subject “Japanese utilities,” the numbers still seem suspicious. If nuclear used to account for 30% of electricity generation, how could its loss cause these increases of fossil fuel imports of over 150%? The government’s own charts show fossil fuel generated electricity going from about 60% to 80%, only a 33% increase (Japan Agency for Natural Resources and Energy. 2012 White Paper on Energy, p. 132). The public is clearly being deceived.
The hand-wringing over fossil fuel imports appears to be a well-crafted public relations trope that has succeeded in winning back some public sympathy for the restart of nuclear plants. However, the fact that Kyle Bass didn’t mention the energy crunch at all lends support to my theory that it is a cynical distraction. People who have been paying attention to Japan for a long time know that its severe demographic, economic and fiscal problems had started long before March 2011. For that matter, the nuclear industry had been bruised and battered for a long time as well. The one good thing about Fukushima Daiichi is that it woke people up to the overlooked hazards of other plants: Kashiwazaki, Shika, Hamaoka, Tsuruga, Mihama, Higashidori, Rokkasho, Monju – so many with newly discovered problems that even if the new Nuclear Regulatory Authority decides that some plants are safe to restart, the future costs of decommissioning all the unsafe ones will be staggering expenses lasting for decades.

Nuclear War without Nuclear Weapons

As if this sobering fact were not enough, I have to conclude with Kyle Bass’ rhetorical question (at 5:00 in the video referenced above): “You know how this ends, right?... This ends through war… it’s economic entropy played to its logical conclusion.”  A war among developed countries - for example, the U.S., Japan and China fighting over control of the South China Sea – is almost impossible to imagine. It would be like no war the world has ever known.
All wars since WWII have involved conflict between or within developing nations (which were often proxy wars between superpowers) or between superpowers and developing nations. One type of conflict that hasn’t happened in seventy years is direct conflict among superpowers and developed nations. When London, Tokyo and Dresden were being bombarded during WWII, there were no nuclear power plants. If there had been, Japan and Europe would have been rendered uninhabitable. We know what happened when Chernobyl exploded, and that it could have been more devastating if a second explosion had not been averted. The frightening question to contemplate concerns what would happen today if a similar conflict erupted between China and Japan, or any other pair or alliance of countries with nuclear power plants.
A modern war would proceed much like the 1990-91 Gulf War on Iraq. Before troops marched in, attackers would aim to soften up the enemy, to destroy infrastructure and the ability of the enemy to wage war. Electricity supplies would be knocked out, so nuclear power plants would be forced to rely on backup power, but it would be unlikely that they could keep it going long enough. Supplies of emergency diesel fuel would be unreliable, and the main grid might not be repairable while the country was under attack. If things got really ugly, there could be deliberate or accidental bombing of nuclear power plants or spent fuel storage sites. Some facilities are supposedly built to withstand air plane crashes, but consider the vulnerability of spent fuel storage, especially the ruins of Fukushima’ spent fuel pools.
The existence of four hundred nuclear plants around the world might be a deterrence in the same way that nuclear arsenals are. If hostile nations rationally assess the risks, they will be deterred from escalating tensions with any nation that has a civilian nuclear capacity, let alone one with nuclear weapons. During WWII, American forces began planning for the occupation of Japan while they were still bombing it, which is the reason they spared the Imperial Palace and a few other locations. In the same way, aggressors might refrain from creating a nuclear wasteland in a country they might want to exploit or occupy at some future date. Or they might refrain from creating a nuclear catastrophe that would impact wide regions beyond the countries involved in the conflict. On the bright side, another kind of deterrence lies in the fact that so many developed countries have little for aggressors to covet. It is doubtful that anyone would want to occupy and govern a country that has the nuclear fallout and wreckage of Fukushima Daiichi to clean up – a job that is to be done by a population that now needs more adult diapers than baby diapers. The recently elected Japanese hawks talk so much about the need for better defense, but they fail to see that this goal may have already been achieved. If you want to be safe from attack, wear an old coat and drive an aging, rusted car.

Further reading:

Martin Walker. "Japan's Looming Crisis." UPI.com. November 19, 2012.

Khosrow B. Semnani, Gary M. Sandquist. "The Next Chernobyl?" The New York Times. January 2, 2013.
A contrary view: 
Joe Weisenthal. "Kyle Bass's Most Famous Trade Is A Disaster, And It Is Never Going To Work Out." Business Insider. May 20, 2012.