Determinants of the 1991–1993 Japanese recession: Evidence from a structural model of the Japanese economy |
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Authors: | Allan D. Brunner Steven B. Kamin |
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Affiliation: | Mail Stop 42, Division of International Finance, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, 20th and C Streets, N. W., Washington, DC 20551, USA |
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Abstract: | The objectives of this paper are to determine the extent to which various factors contributed to the most recent recession in Japan and to assess whether the recent behavior of the Japanese economy differs from that in previous recessions. Toward that end, we develop a small, structural macroeconometric model of the Japanese economy and estimate it using data from 1971 Q1 to 1991 Q1, the period just prior to the recent downturn. The important results can be summarized as follows. First, the severity of the recent recession probably does not reflect structural economic changes. Second, the poor economic performance in 1991–1993 period was to some extent predictable, reflecting the unwinding of imbalances that developed during the preceding expansion. Finally, unpredictable movements in exchange rates, land prices, and stock prices occurring after 1991 played an important, but not predominant, part in accentuating the downturn, while unusually stimulative fiscal and monetary policies appear to have contributed substantially to GDP during the recession. |
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Keywords: | Japan Economic fluctuations Economic recession Structural model |
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