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Weakened at the End of 1990?
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18141 |
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Section : |
CURRENT ISSUES
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11 / 1990 |
1,902 Words |
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Roger A. Brooks Roger A. Brooks is director of the Heritage Foundation's Asian
Studies Center. |
In the past, when analysts spoke about Japan's economic future, all pointed to a continually rising sun. The only could that could possibly darken that horizon, they said, was another, but very unlikely, oil crisis.
Yet, when Iraqi rolled into Kuwait on August 2, many Japanese consumers and corporations, while shocked by the news, did not seem to be worried about Japan's ability to cope with higher oil prices. And, wile Tokyo's stock and bond prices were plummeting at the beginning of September, along with other world markets, many observers and economists maintained that Japan could weather higher oil prices much more comfortably than it had the two oil shocks of 1973 and 1979.
How could this be so? The increased resilience they attributed to energy-conservation measures and industrial restructuring during the past decade. Like other nations in the Asia-Pacific region, Japan has used the low oil prices of the past several years to build up its stockpile of oil and oil products. Currently, Japan maintains a cushion of around 145 days in its stockpile, almost as much as the rest of the region combined, and 46 days more than the surplus maintained by the combined industrialized members of the Paris based International Energy Agency.
There remains, of course, much concern about the longterm effect of the "Persian Gulf crisis on the Japanese economy. First of all, Japan not only imports about 12 percent of its oil from Iraq and Kuwait, but it also has more than $1 billion in loans outstanding to Iraq. These loans continue to be at risk. Second, Japan is more dependent on Middle Eastern oil than is any other industrialized nation,
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