by FinancialTimesVideos
When shown the magnificent run-up in Japanese equities over the past six months and asked why he is skeptical about the likely success of Abenomics, Mizuho's chief economist simply explains, "because I am not suffering from amnesia," as the rest of the market appears to be.
He goes in this brief interview with the FT to explain there is nothing
new here. We already saw massive fiscal expenditure in the 1990s (which
failed to gain any real economic traction) and as far as quantitative
easing, Ueno reminds his interviewer, we saw major QE between 2001 and
2006 (that failed), Furthermore, the so-called growth strategy, "every
Japanese cabinet has undertaken such doctrines without any success." The
discussion then switches from the dashing of hopes to the risks of the policy.
Five minutes well spent this weekend to remind your momentum-driven
recency-biased anchored view of the world that there is nothing new
under the sun and moar is not always better...
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