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<text id=93HT0501>
<link 90TT0948>
<link 89TT3041>
<link 89TT1463>
<title>
1981: How Japan Does It
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1981 Highlights
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
March 30, 1981
ECONOMY & BUSINESS
How Japan Does It
</hdr>
<body>
<p>The world's toughest competitor stirs a U.S. trade storm
</p>
<p> Like a dazed and bleeding prizefighter trying to call time out
in the middle of a round, America's automakers have been
pleading for months for relief from the pummeling they have been
taking from Japan. While sales of American-made cars have been
slumping, Japanese-made Datsuns and Toyotas, Mazdas and Hondas
have been streaming through U.S. ports at the rate of some 6,000
vehicles a day. The import flood has given Japan 23% of the
entire U.S. car market. General Motors Chairman Roger Smith
last week urged a "short-term voluntary" cutback in imports and
warned that the alternative was a trade war with Japan. In
Washington and Tokyo the Reagan Administration and the
government of Prime Minister Zenko Suzuki worked determinedly
to settle the most festering trade issue the two countries have
faced since World War II.
</p>
<p> During the 1980 presidential campaign, Reagan assured
autoworkers that he would give relief from the onslaught. But
the Administration is now deeply split over the question. Free
traders, including Budget Director David Stockman, have argued
with a protectionist-minded group headed by Transportation
Secretary Drew Lewis over whether to press Japan to restrain
imports "voluntarily." Attorney General William French Smith
added to the confusion last week by releasing a memo arguing
that any such deal would violate U.S. antitrust rules. The
Cabinet last Thursday discussed a report that presented options
ranging from legal limits on Japanese auto imports to no action
at all, but it reached no decision.
</p>
<p> Meanwhile in Japan, the Suzuki government tried to pressure its
auto companies to restrain exports. Foreign Minister Masayoshi
Ito said that he was "determined" to keep the issue from
developing into a more serious political one. The Japanese fear
that the auto confrontation will upset Prime Minister Suzuki's
visit to Washington in early May. As an advance man for that
visit and a conciliator on the auto problem, former Prime
Minister Takeo Fukuda traveled to Washington last week and met
with President Reagan.
</p>
<p> The Japanese car companies so far have been resisting all
government pressure to hold down exports to the U.S. But
Katsuji Kawamata, chairman of Nissan Motor Co., maker of
Datsuns, hinted that they might accept some compromise in order
to head off even tougher U.S. action. Said he: "We cannot
continue to act as if we couldn't care less what is happening
over there."
</p>
<p> What is happening, of course, is the rapid deterioration of a
major American industry. Detroit's automakers last year lost
more than $4 million, and during the past three years, U.S.
annual auto production has slumped by 30%, to 6 million
vehicles. Today almost 200,000 American autoworkers are
unemployed, and many of them have little hope of ever returning
to work in their industry. To them and to most U.S. auto
executives, the problem is Japanese imports. Since 1975,
annual sales of Japanese cars in the U.S. have jumped from
800,000 to 1.9 million.
</p>
<p> The trade issue has taken on such importance because of the
auto industry's key role in the economy. One out of five
American workers is employed either directly or indirectly in
making, servicing or selling cars; and industries like steel,
glass and rubber are heavily dependent upon automobile sales to
keep their own plants operating. In addition, Detroit is of
strategic significance, since General Motors, Ford and Chrysler
also make war material for the Defense Department.
</p>
<p> Detroit's problems have come to symbolize the ills of U.S.
business in general. The saga of American cars in the past
three years resembles the story of too many industries during
the past decade. Television, textiles, steel, calculators,
ship-building--American companies once dominated all those
markets. But then U.S. executives watched almost helplessly as
their customers were snatched away by industrious Japanese
competitors selling better products at lower prices.
</p>
<p> The arguments of those who favor trade restrictions have varied
little since 1791, when Alexander Hamilton, the first Secretary
of the Treasury, wrote his Report on Manufactures. Hamilton
advocated high tariffs as the way to protect new American
industries. Reagan Cabinet members such as Drew Lewis and
Commerce Secretary Malcolm Baldrige and the heads of American
auto companies now argue that the domestic auto industry has
been thrown into a temporary upheaval because of consumer demand
for fuel-efficient cars. They maintain that if Japanese imports
were reduced for a three-year "breathing spell," the U.S. firms
would be able to rebuild and begin producing the kind of cars
that consumers obviously demand.
</p>
<p> The case for free trade is by far more compelling. It has
also changed little since it was set forth in 1776 by Adam Smith
in The Wealth of Nations. Treasury Secretary Donald Regan,
David Stockman, and Chief Economist Murray Weidenbaum argue
today that import restrictions would, among other things,
penalize consumers by enabling U.S. automakers to raise prices
without fear of being undercut by competition from Japan.
Protection in the U.S. could also lead to a dangerous escalating
trade war around the world. Such a war would have serious
consequences for U.S. foreign and defense policy.
</p>
<p> Both the advocates and the opponents of import restrictions
admit that the ultimate solution for the troubles of the auto
industry is for Detroit to build products that are better and
cheaper than anything Japan has to offer. The question, in a
word, is how.
</p>
<p> Searching for answers to that query has become a growth
industry. From Harvard Sociologist Ezra F. Vogel's 1979 treatise,
Japan as Number One: Lessons for America, to U.C.L.A.
Management Professor William Ouchi's new, Theory Z: How American
Business Can Meet the Japanese Challenge, academics are telling
the U.S. that the most dutiful student of its management
practices is now the teacher.
</p>
<p> Businessmen are getting the message. After years of smiling
while armies of Japanese executives trooped through their
offices to learn the secrets of U.S. industry, Americans are
seeking a tip or two for themselves. Like pilgrims to the
temple of success, they are traveling to an ancient land they
can scarcely understand to learn how Japan does it. With a
mixture of curiosity and envy they are asking: How has an
overpopulated island country with less land than California
leaped in only three decades from wartime defeat and the status
of industrial sweatshop to that of high-technology dynamo? How
has a country that imports 100% of its aluminum, 99.8% of its
oil, 98.4% of its iron ore and 66.4% of its wood and lumber
become a world economic power?
</p>
<p> Gone are the days when Japan's achievements could be explained
away by the litany of complaints that Western businessmen have
been echoing since the early 1960s. No longer is Japan enjoying
a competitive advantage from "modern" factories built in the
early postwar years. True, new industrial facilities constructed
on the ashes of bombed-out buildings gave Japan an advantage
during the 1950s and early 1960s. But that was nearly 30 years
ago. Japanese businesses in recent years have updated and
improved their plants and factories and thus maintained their
competitive advantage.
</p>
<p> No longer does Japan win markets simply by holding down wages
and exporting cheap products. Until the early 1960s, the
country did have a low wage base, but today in Japan salaries
are on a level with those of leading industrial nations.
</p>
<p> Critics are equally wrong when they charge that Japan succeeds
only because it systematically blocks all competing foreign
products from entering its domestic market. Such charges were
undoubtedly true for at least a quarter century after World War
II. The Japanese had a host of official and unofficial ways of
holding down imports and promoting exports. Foreign businessmen
faced high tariffs and found it difficult to market their goods
through the country's very complicated distribution system.
"Buy Japanese" was a strong, if unspoken, practice. American
businessmen also accused the Japanese of "dumping," or selling
their products at a loss just to expand their market shares.
In 1979 the U.S. Treasury found that Japanese companies were,
in fact, dumping color television sets. But the Japanese, under
heavy pressure from the U.S., have generally ceased such
practices, and reduced their tariffs and import quotas.
</p>
<p> Nor is there much to the argument that Japan is getting a "free
ride" on the coattails of U.S. defense spending. For many years
that was true. By relying on the U.S. to provide for its
protection Japan kept its armed forces small and saved billions
of dollars annually in defense expenditures. The savings were
spent on bolstering the growth of industry. But in the past
decade, Japan's defense establishment has grown to the eighth
largest on earth. Indeed, U.S. arms manufacturers and aerospace
firms are beginning to worry that Japan could eventually emerge
as a major competitor in export markets that the U.S. has so far
had almost to itself.
</p>
<p> As scholars of Japan's business and economic triumphs are now
learning, much of that country's success traces back to cultural
traits as old as Japan itself. They have helped it survive
through a history marked at every turn by the need to function
in a world of scarce resources. Those key national traits:
</p>
<p> EMULATION. Few nations have so sought out and used the best
from other societies as Japan. In a sense Japan has become "the
best of all possible worlds." Examples abound of the
copycat-Japan theme. In 1543 shipwrecked Portuguese mariners
went ashore on the Japanese island of Tanegashima and traded a
few firearms in return for food and water from the locals, who
had never before encountered either Westerners or their weapons.
Thirty years later one of the sailors returned to the island,
and this time found the populace armed with 20,000 guns, each
an exact replica of that original weapon.
</p>
<p> In Japan's early postwar rush to rebuild its economy, the
nation's businessmen searched the globe for patents and
industrial technologies. In 1953 the Sony Corp. paid Western
Electric a mere $25,000 for the non-exclusive rights to
manufacture the transistor, and thereafter built the investment
into an entire microelectronics industry.
</p>
<p> Japanese businessmen today still descend on foreign executives
to learn, often in the most excruciating detail, exactly how
they conduct business. The nation has an insatiable hunger for
foreign technical and scientific manuals. Universities and
corporations stockpile them and refer to them assiduously, and
businessmen and engineers eagerly use their best ideas.
</p>
<p> CONSENSUS. For all their cross-cultural borrowing, the Japanese
have remained astonishingly unchanged. One of the most
important of their native characteristics is a willingness to
achieve consensus by compromising. Asian Scholar Edwin Lee of
Hamilton College suggests that a clue to this might be found in
the Japanese word ie, a concept that can be interchangeably
applied to everything from self to home to family. A person is
an extension of his immediate family members, his company, his
community and his nation as a whole. All are bound together in
an encompassing common purpose.
</p>
<p> Japan feels itself to be a "family" because in a real sense
nearly everyone has at least some voice in running society. No
matter what the group--from the smallest upstart enterprise to
the largest multibillion-dollar multinational--nothing gets done
until the people involved agree. The Japanese call this
nemawashi (root binding). Just as a gardener carefully wraps all
the roots of a tree together before he attempts to transplant
it, Japanese leaders bring all members of society together
before an important decision is made.
</p>
<p> The result is an often tedious, and sometimes interminable,
process of compromise in the pursuit of consensus. But in the
end the group as a whole benefits because all members are
aligned behind the same goal.
</p>
<p>FUTURISM. Japanese society is forward looking in a manner that
is difficult for Westerners to understand. Individuals are seen
to benefit only through the elevation of the group as a whole;
corporations are not after the quick payoff or big quarterly
jumps in shareholder dividends, but a solid market position that
will be rewarded over the longer term. Businesses and
government look five, ten, even 20 years ahead and try to build
a prosperity that can last. Says Eishiro Saito, president of
Nippon Steel: "Executives in Japan must constantly do their
utmost to provide employees and their families with a stable
life and hope for the future."
</p>
<p> One reason that the companies are not under constant pressure
for fast profits is that much of Japanese industry is owned by
banks and not by individual shareholders. Major holdings of
many of the country's biggest and best-known companies, such as
Toshiba, Fujitsu and Nippon Steel, rest with banks that are less
interested in short-range dividend increases than in seeing
their firms' profits reinvested to ensure future growth.
</p>
<p> This long-haul mentality is reflected in Japan's dedication to
savings. Nothing has given more momentum to the Japanese
economic juggernaut than the propensity of its citizens, no
matter how wealthy or modest their means, to save their money.
Their deposits have given the nation's industry the capital it
has needed to keep Japanese plants modern and productive. Says
James Abegglen of the Boston Consulting Group, which has
conducted numerous studies of Japanese business: "The thing
that has enabled Japan to get to the top and stay there is
savings. Saving of all kinds--government, corporate, personal."
During 1980, Japanese workers saved an estimated 20% of their
individual and family incomes, more than three times as much as
the Americans.
</p>
<p>QUALITY. Two decades ago the words Made in Japan were
synonymous with shoddy workmanship, and Japanese products were
marketed mainly in 5-and-10-cents stores. Yet today firms
like Sony and Datsun sell their products principally on the
basis of high standards. Says Masao Kanamori, president of
Mitsubishi Heavy Industries: "The existence of our company
would be impossible if we failed to reassess our performance in
quality, production and cost."
</p>
<p> This change is a result of the country's preoccupation with
quality control, a management concept that until quite recently
had been insufficiently considered in the U.S. Yet it was
American academics who helped the Japanese improve their
products and change their image. One proposed device was
quality-control circles, where workers and their supervisors
discuss ways to improve output and standards on the job.
Statistician W. Edwards Deming gave a proselytizing speech in
Tokyo in 1950 on the virtues of quality control as a
manufacturing technique. Since that time, Deming has been
elevated in Japan to the status of industrial folk hero. The
Deming quality-control award is now one of the most sought-after
prizes among Japanese firms.
</p>
<p> In Japanese plants and factories, workers are not only
encouraged, but actually expected, to make quality control their
top priority. At Matsushita Electric, the country's second
largest electrical company (1980 sales: $13.7 billion), workers
are instilled with the notion that each one of them is a
quality-control inspector. If they spot a faulty item in the
production process, they are encouraged to shut down the whole
assembly line to fix it. Pressure to improve quality reaches
beyond the shop floor and often pits entire plants of competing
companies like Hitachi and Sony in furious statistical battles
to produce the lowest defect rates for products.
</p>
<p> The Japanese today look down on what they regard as the poor
quality of American products. Kenichi Odawara, professor of
economics at Sophia University in Tokyo, recently published a
book on the problems of the U.S. economy and workmanship
entitled The Great American Disease. One example of that
disease is familiar to any Japanese car dealer attempting to
sell an American-built automobile in Japan: the cars have to
be given an additional coat of paint before they can satisfy the
demanding Japanese.
</p>
<p> COMPETITION. While Western businessmen often regard Japan as
a giant cartel, competition is actually fierce. Japan's
thriving domestic market is the principal battleground for most
Japanese companies. The products shipped abroad have such high
quality and low price in large part because they have already
survived the domestic Japanese market. In 1955, for example, the
leading motorcycle company in Japan was Tohatsu, while Honda was
a distant No. 2. By 1964 the more competitive Honda dominated
the local market and Tohatsu had begun moving into other fields.
Today the company is principally a manufacturer of small
engines and snowmobiles. Says one American economist living in
Japan: "Their idea of competition is different from ours, yet
they compete furiously. It is all done within the context of
being very Japanese--orderly."
</p>
<p> New products hit the domestic Japanese market with dizzying
frequency. In the electronics industry alone, eight major and
a dozen minor semiconductor firms are battling for a lead in the
manufacture of microprocessors and so-called computers on a
chip. American firms pioneered this technology in the late
1960s, but Japanese companies have already captured 30% of the
world market for computer memory chips.
</p>
<p> The rush to use the chips has propelled the nation's automakers
into headlong competition to come up with new applications.
When Toyota last year introduced the world's first chip-operated
voice synthesizer to warn drivers of low fuel and fluid levels
in their cars, Nissan Motors hustled out its competing versions
within weeks.
</p>
<p> Taken together, these five qualities have furthered a national
spirit of compromise and cooperation and a willingness to endure
short-term setbacks for the long-term good of the nation,
company or family as a whole. Says Shiro Miyamoto, an official
of the powerful Ministry of International Trade and Industry:
"Our system is born of the traditions and history of this
country, a small nation with few resources. Without our way of
doing things, there would be continual conflict and nothing
would ever get done."
</p>
<p> When these Japanese characteristics are brought into the modern
factory, the result is a smoothly functioning enterprise that
produces quality goods. This is most clearly seen in the easy
working relationship of management and labor. Japan has fewer
strikes and less labor unrest than any other major industrial
power. In 1978 Japan lost 1.4 million workdays because of
strikes, while the U.S. lost 39 million.
</p>
<p> To a Japanese worker, his company is not an oppressor but rather
the source of his income and the expression of his place in
society. Says Ryutaro Nohmura, 57, who owns a tentmaking firm
in Osaka: "Employees in Japan view their company as an
extension of their family life. Indeed, many of them equate the
importance of their company with that of their own life."
</p>
<p> The workers trust their bosses to make the right decisions
because there is a pervasive sense that both labor and
management are working together. In Japanese companies, as a
general rule, managers rise from within the corporate ranks,
adding to the feeling of camaraderie and shared experience.
Says Yoichi Takahashi, head of Hitachi's 70,000-strong labor
union: "Everything depends on dialogue and trust. What is good
for the company is good for the union. The workers know that
their labor is what makes the company prosperous." Adds Noboru
Yoshii, a senior adviser of Sony Corp.: "There is little
opposition between management and workers because every manager
comes up the ladder from employee. We do not call our employees
workers or laborers, but associates instead. One reason
everyone at Sony wears the same blue-gray jacket is that we are
saying Sony is a working company, a blue-collar company all the
way from the top to the bottom."
</p>
<p> The close relationship between worker and company is intimately
connected with the country's system of lifetime employment,
which covers 35% of the country's labor force, nearly all of
whom are employees of Japan's largest and most powerful
companies. In Japan a worker typically joins a firm directly
out of trade school or university and expects to stay there
until he retires. Says Akio Morita, chairman of Sony: "In
Japan, once we hire people we cannot lay them off."
</p>
<p> Retirement at such lifetime firms normally comes at the early
age of 55, but does not automatically swell the ranks of the
nation's unemployed. Not only do corporations give their
retiring workers lump-sum retirement payments, but upwards of
75% of the workers are rehired immediately, at lower salaries,
by smaller companies that in many cases have been supplying
parts or subcontracting services to the larger firms all along.
For those who do not find jobs, and for the unemployed elderly,
the government and many private employers have launched
extensive retraining programs to give the jobless workers new
skills.
</p>
<p> Since those workers covered by lifetime employment know that
they have a guaranteed job, and that their future is tied up
with that firm, they are willing to be more flexible at work
than employees in many Western countries. New machinery is not
a threat to a worker's job but a useful told that may help
improve company profits. As Fujio Mitarai, head of Canon
U.S.A., told TIME's Robert Grieves: "In order to automate
production, we had to divert workers into altogether new fields.
We moved them from cameras to copiers to calculators, but we
kept everyone employed in the process."
</p>
<p> For many Japanese employees, and especially those of the
nation's larger companies, life at the plant stresses the
virtues of self-discipline and diligence. They seem to embody
the Datsun slogan: "We are driven." At many firms, work begins
with a chorus or two of the company song so that employees can
get in the properly productive frame of mind. At Nissan Motor,
every shift begins with a warm-up period of calisthenics on the
shop floor.
</p>
<p> At other Japanese firms, such as Japan Airlines and Mitsui Trust
Bank, new employees eagerly submit to unusual initiations. One
Tokyo retailing firm dispatched its group of newcomers for a
mid-winter swim on the northern island of Hokkaido to tone up
their self-discipline. Matsushita workers, by contrast, are sent
to a Zen Buddhist temple for three-day retreats. In most
Japanese companies the new workers, their parents and other
relatives attend a ceremony at which the president welcomes the
newcomers to the firm.
</p>
<p> The working environment of Japanese plants is not fancy. Though
they are kept immaculately clean, the buildings are spare and
functional, and the machinery is always the most up-to-date.
Occasionally workers will try to add some local color. At
Nissan's body assembly plant in Zama, near Yokohama, workers
have pasted pictures of movie stars like Sayuri Yoshinaga and
Kaori Momoi on the new robots that make the cars.
</p>
<p> Japanese companies also provide extensive social services for
their employees. New workers are often housed in company-built
dormitories. The employees remain in this housing for as long
as five years, vacating in many cases to get married and move
into their own homes, which the company helps finance.
</p>
<p> Much of the employee life outside work is spent in company
social clubs, where courses are available in flower arranging
and the tea ceremony. Weddings are also conducted in the social
clubs; and the company helps pay the costs, including as much
as $500 to rent the traditional bridal gown.
</p>
<p> The attitudes of the bosses of Japanese companies are also
different from those of their Western counterparts. This can
be seen particularly with regard to investment for research and
development. In the U.S., corporations spend an average of about
1% of total sales on research and development. In Japan the
figure is closer to 6%.
</p>
<p> Investment is also directed at constantly modernizing on-line
manufacturing techniques. The results are obvious; at Nissan's
highly automated assembly plant, 35 workers now aided by
industrial robots produce 350 Datsun car bodies every eight
hours, seven time the productivity rate of competing U.S.
automakers.
</p>
<p> Though they are willing to invest heavily in automation and
productivity, Japanese managers are tightfisted when it comes
to spending on actual buildings, which they view as little more
than shells required to keep out the rain while the work goes
on inside. Japanese plants are constructed so that they can be
expanded or redesigned with ease to accommodate new production
techniques or additional assembly lines. After a few years the
factories can be razed if necessary.
</p>
<p> Unlike many American bosses, Japanese managers go to great
lengths to involve their employees in the life of the company.
For example, although General Motors actively recruits
productivity suggestions from employees and offers up to $10,000
for a proposal that is adopted, the company receives an average
of less than one suggestion per employee per year and adopts
one-third of the ideas. At Toyota's main plant near Nagoya, on
the other hand, officials receive more than nine suggestions per
worker per year and adopt a vast majority of them.
</p>
<p> One of the most complex aspects of Japanese business is the
relationship between managers and the government. Tokyo
ministries that set national economic priorities can exert
substantial pressure on companies, but their influence is much
less than is believed outside Japan. Says Takeshi Sakurada,
chairman of the Toho Rayon manufacturing company and honorary
president of the Japan Federation of Employers: "The amount of
government interference or the role of government in private
business is very small as compared with the U.S. or the European
Community." Adds one Western economist in Tokyo: "There is no
Japan Inc.--if there ever was one."
</p>
<p> Japanese businessmen do not have to bear the heavy burden of
government regulation that American industrialists do. For
example, antitrust rules barely exist. This permitted the
Japanese auto companies to get together with government
officials and agree on a common design for antipollution
equipment. That would have been against the law in the U.S.,
where each auto company worked independently to develop its own
system. Japanese carmakers today are at least two years ahead
of the U.S. in emission-control technology. In a similar way,
government and business usually work out mutually acceptable
agreements for solving the considerable problems of health and
environment.
</p>
<p> The hand of the government's tax man in business is
approximately the same as in the U.S. The corporate tax rate
on business profits ranges from 22% to 40%, which is similar to
the 17% to 46% rate that applies to American business. Both
countries have a range of exemptions and deductions that are
virtually impossible to compare.
</p>
<p> The most important factor in business-government relationship
is that, as in all other areas of Japanese society, agreement
is reached only after long discussions. If talk fails, the
government can turn to "administrative guidance," a procedure
rather akin to American-style jawboning. Even then the private
companies can simply refuse to accept the government's
recommendations. In the late 1950s, for example, the Japanese
government suggested that the nation's automakers join forces
to produce a low-cost "people's car" modeled after the
Volkswagen in order to crack the U.S. market. The automakers
refused and launched their own separate products.
</p>
<p> Despite Japan's enviable economic progress in the past quarter-
century, the nation is hardly without its social and economic
problems. Many of its shortcomings are side effects of the
same qualities that have helped it to achieve so much. The
sense of national unity and consensus has resulted in a society
that tends to reject anyone who is different. One example: The
Burakumin--descendants of pre-17th century social outcasts, are
still not considered full members of society. Some 600,000
Koreans, many of whose families have lived in Japan for
generations, are likewise not integrated into the mainstream of
Japanese life.
</p>
<p> Power in Japan is concentrated within the upper echelons of
business, banking and the pro-business Liberal Democratic party,
which has ruled continuously since 1955. Relations are much
cozier than would be accepted in U.S. or Western Europe.
Members of the nation's power elite, whatever their profession,
often have known each other closely for a half-century. When
executives retire, they frequently become corporate advisers,
honorary chairmen and industrial counselors. Likewise, when
senior civil servants leave government they may become top
advisers in the very corporations they once regulated; the
custom is called amakudari or, literally, "descent from heaven."
</p>
<p> In Japan's pell-mell rush to grow, so much of the nation's
wealth has been invested in industry that little has been left
over for anything else. Even such basic amenities as sewers and
housing remain inadequate by Western standards. Housing space
is so cramped that building plots cost up to nine times as much
as they do in the U.S. and room occupancy rates are 50% higher.
</p>
<p> Japan is already finding its resources strained even before it
begins to tackle those public services. To keep the economy
expanding and at the same time boost government social spending,
the Liberal Democrats since 1975 have relied increasingly on
debt financing. Deficit spending for the current fiscal year is
now projected to top $71 billion, or 33% of the nation's $213
billion budget. By comparison, the 1980 fiscal deficit in the
U.S. though $59 billion, was only about 10% total federal
spending.
</p>
<p> Yet even with its budget difficulties, Japan this year should
have the best overall economic record of any major industrial
nation. Growth is expected to be 5.3%, and the inflation rate
should be no more than 5.5%. Though Japan has run a trade
deficit for the past two years, largely because of oil imports,
the nation's balance of payments deficit has been improving.
As a result, the yen will no doubt continue to remain one of the
world's strongest currencies.
</p>
<p> As a postwar business dynamo, Japan shows that a large and
complex society can function smoothly in a tumultuous world
environment if people are willing to make some compromises in
order to obtain larger objectives. Though the way Japan manages
its affairs is, in many respect, the unique outgrowth of the
country's historical experience, certain of its lessons can be
applied in industrial economies everywhere, and particularly in
the U.S.
</p>
<p> Americans are reared with a commitment to individual liberty
and freedom. But the U.S. was forged in a frontier spirit of
cooperation and collective enterprise that was as simple and
forthright as a barn-raising. Western thinkers from John Locke
to Oliver Wendell Holmes believe that individuality at some
point has to give ground to group needs. It has taken a
successful country on the rim of Asia to remind the U.S. that
teamwork, however it is organized, is still the prerequisite for
a prosperous society.
</p>
<p>-- By Christopher Byron. Reported by S. Chang and Edwin M.
Reingold/Tokyo</p>
</body>
</article>
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