Japan's
"Great Recession" lasted from approximately 1992 - 2007 and
finally provided the economics profession with the necessary
background to understand what actually happened during the US
recession of the 1930s. The discoveries made, however, are so
far-reaching that a large portion of economics literature will have
to be modified to accommodate another half to the macro economic
spectrum of possibilities that conventional theorists have
overlooked.
In particular, Japan's Great Recession showed that
when faced with a massive fall in asset prices, companies typically
jettison the conventional goal of profit maximization and move to
minimize debt in order to restore their credit ratings. This shift in
corporate priority, however, has huge theoretical as well as
practical implications and opens up a whole new field of study. For
example, the new insight can explain fully the precise mechanism of
prolonged depression and liquidity trap which conventional economics
- based on corporate profit maximization - has so far failed to offer
as a convincing explanation.
The author developed the idea of
yin and yang business cycles where the conventional world of profit
maximization is the yang and the world of balance sheet recession,
where companies are minimizing debt, is the yin. Once so divided,
many varied theories developed in macro economics since the 1930s can
be nicely categorized into a single comprehensive theory, i.e., the
Holy Grail of macro economics
The policy implication of this
new discovery is immense in that the conventional aversion to fiscal
policy in favor of monetary policy will have to be completely
reversed when the economy is in the yin phase.
The theoretical
implications are also immense in the sense that the economics
profession will no longer have to rely so much on various rigidities
to explain recessions that have become the standard practice within
the so-called New Keynesian economics of the last twenty years.
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