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Japanification of Europe Is Here and Escape Isn't Easy, ING Says

Europe’s situation has long left it open to comparisons with Japan in the 1990s.

Japanification of Europe Is Here and Escape Isn't Easy, ING Says
A man carries a painting purchased from a flea market in Wroclaw, Poland. (Photographer: Bartek Sadowski/Bloomberg) 

(Bloomberg) -- The euro area’s anemic growth and inflation mean it’s probably already experiencing its own Japanification, and escape could prove hard if the Asian nation’s track record is any guide, according to ING Group.

Europe’s situation has long left it open to comparisons with Japan in the 1990s. In a report on Monday, ING lists similarities including an increase in government debt, a buildup of bad loans at banks, an aging population and huge monetary policy loosening.

While Japan’s policy response to its crisis was slow, it also fell victim to bad timing, according to ING. Various chances of recovery were snuffed out by the 1997-98 Asian financial crisis, then the bursting of the dot-com bubble and later the global financial crisis.

That may well be the fate of the euro area, too, which last year appeared to be on the verge of unwinding stimulus only to be pushed back in the other direction. With global trade tensions weighing on sentiment and inflation expectations near a record low, the European Central Bank is facing the prospect of interest rate cuts or re-starting quantitative easing.

Japanification of Europe Is Here and Escape Isn't Easy, ING Says

“Without a strong recovery, it is difficult to escape the low growth, low inflation and subsequently low rates environment,” said Carsten Brzeski and Inga Fechner, economists at ING. “An economic upturn could quickly be over and monetary policy might not have enough ammunition up its sleeve, with interest rates remaining stuck at the zero lower bound for years to come.”

The parallels mean Europe could be facing a ballooning of its central bank balance sheet in the years to come, and a major fiscal package could be needed. There’s also the prospect of higher retirement ages to keep prevent the labor force from shrinking.

“For the euro zone, the most important lesson is probably not so much the root cause of Japanification but the desperate attempts to get out of it,” ING said. “There will not be much room for rate hikes in the coming years.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Catherine Bosley in Zurich at cbosley1@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Fergal O'Brien at fobrien@bloomberg.net, Brian Swint

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