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Japanese Asset Price Bubble Burst (1991)

📉 Overview

  • Origin: Japan, late 1980s–early 1990s.
  • Peak & Burst: The bubble peaked in 1989–1990 and collapsed in 1991.
  • Scope: Real estate and stock markets.
  • Nickname: Led to Japan’s “Lost Decade” (which extended into the 2000s).

⚠️ Causes

  1. Loose Monetary Policy: After the 1985 Plaza Accord, the yen appreciated, hurting exports. Japan’s central bank cut interest rates to stimulate growth.
  2. Speculative Mania: Cheap credit fueled speculation in real estate and stocks.
  3. Overvaluation: At its peak, Tokyo land prices were so inflated that the Imperial Palace grounds were estimated to be worth more than all the land in California.
  4. Weak Regulation: Banks lent aggressively against inflated land values, assuming prices would never fall.
  5. Sudden Policy Tightening: The Bank of Japan raised interest rates sharply in 1989 to cool speculation — triggering the crash.

📊 Impact

  • Stock Market: Nikkei 225 fell from ~39,000 in 1989 to ~15,000 by 1992 (a ~60% drop).
  • Real Estate: Land values fell by 70–80% in major cities over the next decade.
  • Banking Crisis: Massive bad loans; banks became insolvent but delayed recognition (“zombie banks”).
  • Economic Stagnation: Japan entered a period of deflation, weak growth, and low consumer demand.
  • Lost Decade(s): From 1991–2010, Japan’s GDP growth averaged less than 1% per year.

🛠️ Responses

  • Government Stimulus: Large public works programs to boost demand.
  • Monetary Easing: The Bank of Japan lowered interest rates, eventually to zero.
  • Bank Recapitalization: Bailouts and mergers attempted to stabilize the banking sector.
  • Structural Reforms: Slow deregulation and liberalization, but reform efforts were cautious and delayed.
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🌍 Legacy

  • Japan became a case study of how an asset bubble collapse + slow policy response can trap an economy in stagnation.
  • Popularized the concept of the “Liquidity Trap” in modern economics.
  • Influenced global financial thinking (e.g., US and Europe during the 2008 crisis studied Japan’s mistakes).
  • Japan remained a wealthy country but lost its momentum as the rising economic superpower that could rival the US.

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